NANOG and ARIN Friends,

14 Years ago, at the suggestion of Jon Postel and some of the early 
participants in NANOG, we developed the GeekTools Whois proxy to make it easier 
for *us* - network security and abuse techs - to deal with the expanding number 
of gtlds and registrars and the varied whois servers that were appearing. The 
service had both a CLI and  web interface.

The service also led directly to the creation of whois-servers.net, which now 
seems to be part of a number of *nix distributions.

The service has been up for 14 years, and over that time we have fulfilled the 
requirements of all of the whois server operators in regards to minimizing and 
stopping abuse of the GT whois proxy by domain scrapers, spammers, etc, while 
enabling the security folks to do their jobs. In some cases we have even 
written code to pass the ip address of the requestor to the whois server 
registry operator when they wanted to manage quota's directly. We think we have 
a really good relationship with all of the whois server operators, and I think 
we provide a useful service to the community, and is widely used. And in 14 
years we have never been tarred as an enabler of abuse of "the whois" system.

There has obviously never been any kind of charge or fee for using the proxy, 
or any of the other tools on GeekTools. In about 2002 we started placing a 
banner ad on the web interface page to offset some of the costs for the 
bandwidth that the proxy consumes. An average of about $70 a month for over the 
last 10 years. Actual bandwidth costs are higher than that of course, but it 
was a thought in 2002 that we had frankly forgotten about until recently.

Two weeks ago RIPE-NCC, who provide the whois data for IP addresses in the RIPE 
region, informed us that based on decisions by their members, as of January 1st 
2013, tomorrow, they would no longer provide whois proxy query response 
services to GeekTools unless we ponied up $1,800 a year for RIPE membership.

I don't work very well above layer 7. It is what it is. So I wanted to let you 
know that as of midnight tonight, apparently, you won't be able to use 
GeekTools for RIPE related queries. If you have automated scripts, and you are 
one of the users who has expanded access to GeekTools, you'll need to find an 
alternative for RIPE queries *today*. My guess is that you will be able to 
query RIPE directly, once you have worked out that the address space is within 
RIPE's assignments.

I think its wrong to have to pay for whois data that is part of a community 
resource . So I won't do it.

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