> One issue that some of my colleagues identified is the following: > There are malicious ASNs out there who acquire huge amounts of IP6 space > (like multiple /32's) to use for scraping, attacks, etc – they could set > their prefix lengths to 128 and completely blow the storage of any database > that trusts them. > Similarly, a malicious ASN may falsely tag its prefixes as CGNAT so that it > avoids blocking or throttling. > > Maybe the security considerations seconds can cover some of those cases.
point taken randy _______________________________________________ OPSAWG mailing list -- opsawg@ietf.org To unsubscribe send an email to opsawg-le...@ietf.org