The issue isn’t with Spamhaus itself per se, more providers who implement 
automated edge filters based on those lists and then take a long time to get 
removed manually.

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 3, 2019, at 1:40 PM, Eric Dugas 
<edu...@unknowndevice.ca<mailto:edu...@unknowndevice.ca>> wrote:

I cleaned two blocks last year with Spamhaus and others. Took me less than two 
weeks and Spamhaus were the quickest of the bunch (we're talking about a full 
or two business days). PSN can be tricky, same for Netflix and whatnot but I 
always put these new blocks in "quarantine" for a couple of weeks by using 
these services with random IPs in a new block.

In order, I began to announce the prefixes right after the transfers were 
approved by ARIN. I then contacted Spamhaus and the others roughly a week 
later. As I mentioned, Spamhaus were really reactive. The others responded in 
about 2 weeks.

What helped us (I think) is that we're a listed MANRS participant (so 
filtering, BCP38, proper NOC/Ops contacts). We also sign all of our routes with 
ROAs, proper route objects in an IRR and PTRs generated for every IPs.

On Apr 3 2019, at 1:20 pm, Nikolas Geyer 
<n...@neko.id.au<mailto:n...@neko.id.au>> wrote:
A big +1 to checking Spamhaus, specifically their DROP and EDROP lists. These 
two lists are what causes us most pain when acquiring IPv4 space as a lot of 
providers put auto blocking in place based on these two which can be difficult 
to get removed.

I won’t even contemplate prefixes on either of these lists unless the seller 
knocks $5/IP off the purchase price because of the associated time and pain 
trying to clean it up.

Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 3, 2019, at 11:49 AM, Valdis Klētnieks 
<valdis.kletni...@vt.edu<mailto:valdis.kletni...@vt.edu>> wrote:

On Wed, 03 Apr 2019 15:20:17 -0000, "Torres, Matt via NANOG" said:

3. Check SORBS blacklisting. It should not show up except maybe the DUHL 
list(?). If it does, walk away.

SORBS isn't the only place to check. As an example, if Spamhaus doesn't have
nice things to say about the block, it's time to start asking questions....

http://www.anti-abuse.org/multi-rbl-check/ has a fairly good list of
places that could give your customer a bad time (whether or not the
listing is deserved - the point is that being listed anywhere there will
probably mean problems that have to be cleaned up)

You may all now begin the religious war over where else to check.

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