On Dec 11, 2009, at 1:35 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:

> As always, good research by renesys.

What happens when an ASN is requested, and it's discovered that said ASN is 
already in use by an unauthorized network, and that some proportion of the 
Internet are accepting it due to a lack of appropriate routing policy?  Is 
there a process to try and reclaim said ASN via persuasion, or some 
jurisdictionally-appropriate legal action, or peer pressure (pardon the pun), 
or . . . ?

This is a different circumstance than either accidental or deliberate use of an 
already-assigned and -utilized ASN; has this situation occurred in the past, 
and if so, how was it resolved?  If the situation isn't resolved in a timely 
manner, is the ASN in question considered 'poisoned' until a resolution is 
attained, and the next available ASN which isn't being utilized in a rogue 
fashion issued in its place?

Apologies if this is a naive question; I've not run into this particular 
circumstance before, nor have I found any reference to it in any of the various 
list archives.  I do believe that it may become a bit more common, given some 
of the confusion and drama regarding the operationalization of 4-byte ASNs.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Roland Dobbins <rdobb...@arbor.net> // <http://www.arbornetworks.com>

    Injustice is relatively easy to bear; what stings is justice.

                        -- H.L. Mencken




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