I've found pinging a polite email to the whois contact on the ASN -
sometimes- gives useful results, but not always.
Be aware that you're not only dealing with router black-holes, but
seemingly some people have applied bogon filtering to their BIND name
servers also.
If you can provide a non bogon IP within the same AS, it can be useful
for the person at the other end-- shows them they have a problem.
-Shane
On 20/10/2009, at 4:51 PM, Matthew Walster wrote:
2009/10/10 Matthew Palmer <mpal...@hezmatt.org>
A pingable address in the problem range would help people to quickly
evaluate whether they have a problem in their network or upstreams...
The router has the address "109.68.64.1" - saves giving out
customer's IP.
Does anyone have any recommendations for dealing with BOGON space that
hasn't been defiltered by networks? Any ideas how to get people to
update
filter lists?
Matthew Walster