Ronald...

Cleaning up the routing, true.

However, this sounds like there are two issues...

1.      Routing -- Would be nice if the advertising provider(s) stopped doing 
so.
        Not something ARIN can really do much about.

2.      Database -- Sounds like the existing resource holder may not still be 
using
        the resource or may no longer exist. In either case, it's worth having 
ARIN
        investigate the situation and take appropriate database action if that 
is the case.

Owen


Sent from my iPad

On Mar 30, 2011, at 4:59 PM, "Ronald F. Guilmette" <r...@tristatelogic.com> 
wrote:

> 
> In message <be8c4985-f955-4868-8145-146e57bbf...@pch.net>, 
> Bill Woodcock <wo...@pch.net> wrote:
> 
>> On Mar 30, 2011, at 1:58 PM, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
>>> As I already mentioned, 159.223.0.0/16, which is actually registered =
>> to
>>> the Hoechst Celanese Corporation, has quite obviously been hijacked
>> 
>> And have you reported this to ARIN?
> 
> No.  Why would I?
> 
> The ARIN folks have already made it abundantly clear... to me and to others...
> that this sort of thing is "Not our job, man."
> 
> ARIN maintains a data base.  If other people elect to ignore what's in that
> data base... well... as anybody from ARIN will be only too happy to tell you,
> they are not the routing police.
> 
> 
> Regards,
> rfg

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