No. Use of a routing registry is not required.. ARIN's, RADB's or
otherwise. You might want to check out this presentation:
http://nanog.org/meetings/nanog44/abstracts.php?pt=ODg4Jm5hbm9nNDQ=&nm=nanog44
This is an entirely different statement from "Your globally unique IP's
should to be allocated to you in an RIR's database before someone routes
them for you" For example 207.76.0.0/14 is allocated to us, you can
see it in ARIN's whois, but it is not registered in ARIN's IRRD, or any
other.
As further proof - note that people publicly route resources that aren't
registered in a "routing registry database" or even registered to them
by an RIR at all:
http://www.cidr-report.org/as2.0/#Bogons
I'm not saying this is a good thing.. I would like to see the system
drastically improved and secured.. I'm just pointing out how things
actually work today.
Check w/ your provider, but in most cases you will find that they don't
use a route registry.
--Heather
====================================================
Heather Schiller Verizon Business
Customer Security 1.800.900.0241
IP Address Management hel...@verizonbusiness.com
=====================================================
Jon Lewis wrote:
On Thu, 19 Feb 2009, Zaid Ali wrote:
Hi, need some advise here. Do I still need to maintain my objects (and
pay) RADB? I use ARIN as source and all my route objects can be
verified with a whois.
If your objects are all maintained via another routing registry (ARIN's,
altdb, etc.) and you don't care to maintain objects with radb.ra.net,
then you do not need to pay RADB maintenance fees.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Jon Lewis | I route
Senior Network Engineer | therefore you are
Atlantic Net |
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