Just to name few others with the same issue.

AS140731
AS141011
AS141237

Best regards
August Yang

> On Jul 12, 2022, at 6:20 PM, Mike Leber via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> wrote:
>
> This kind of thing is a problem from time to time with the data we get from 
> route collectors.
>
> When we see it we have to add the culprit ASN to a filter list we keep in 
> bgp.he.net.
>
> It tends to be a repeat problem with some collectors and some ASNs.
>
> We haven't really figured out why people send junk routes to route collectors.
>
> The things we've seen aren't just route leaks.  We've seen a variety of AS 
> path spoofing.
>
> We've already added this specific ASN to the filter list and pushed an update 
> for bgp.he.net.
>
> Note, this email is specifically talking about routes received from route 
> collectors and not routes operationally received by he.net via BGP sessions 
> with actual networks.
>
> Mike.
>
> On 7/12/22 12:49 PM, Eric Dugas via NANOG wrote:
>> A friend of mine mentioned that both our Canadian ASNs were listed in 
>> AS147028's peer list on https://bgp.he.net/AS147028 but we have no adjacency 
>> to this network.
>>
>> Their peer count jumped from 1 in May 2022 to 1,800 and just a few days ago 
>> jumped to 8,800. Beside NL-IX, all the IX they are listed on are virtual IX 
>> with a few dozen "hobby networks".
>>
>> The only lead I have is they use HE as transit and they're pumping back BGP 
>> feed to route collectors like RIPE RIS or Route Views with routes stripped 
>> of HE's ASN.
>>
>> Eric
>>

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