On 3/14/24 10:17, Graeme Fowler via mailop wrote:
On 14 Mar 2024, at 16:53, Michael Grimm via mailop <mailop@mailop.org> wrote:
I am getting listed almost on a daily basis on two IPv6 addresses of mine which
happen to be part of OVH's address space (yes, I know).
…you do. So to:
Is there a way to make that de-listing more persistent?
Yes. The following text is fairly instructive:
In the last month we have observed 76 listings.
2001:41d0:701:1000::/64 has been detected 76 times in the last month. It has
been removed 7 times.
In the last month we have observed 63 listings.
2001:41d0:20a:800::/64 has been detected 63 times in the last month. It has
been removed 4 times.
As you can see, it’s the entire /64 getting listed in both cases. They’re
unsavoury neighbourhoods by the look of things.
And, with IPv6, the "entire /64" should be a single subnet. Either OVH
is sharing a /64 among multiple customers or OP has another machine that
is spamming from within the same subnet.
Sharing a /64 among multiple customers doesn't make sense. It's not like
OVH is in danger of running out of IPv6 space any time soon.
--
Jay Hennigan - j...@west.net
Network Engineering - CCIE #7880
503 897-8550 - WB6RDV
_______________________________________________
mailop mailing list
mailop@mailop.org
https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop