Dear all,
In November 2012 we have released the *BGP Visibility Scanner*, a tool
that checks the visibility of IPv4 prefixes at the interdomain level.
We are now happy to further make available the *visibility query for
IPv6 prefixes*.
Back in February 2013 we have presented the BGP
nintended/accidental LVPs and upgrade this tool to
>>> >an anomaly detection mechanism.
>>> >For more information on the definition and characteristics of a Limited
>>> >Visibility prefix, please check the Frequently Asked Questions section o
re updated on a daily basis.
>For more information on the methodology we refer you to the slides of the
NANOG57 presentation about the BGP Visibility Scanner:
>http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog57/presentations/Wednesday/wed.general.Lutu.BGP_visibility_scanner.19.pdf
>Also, you can check
latest.html*
The tool works with publicly available BGP routing data, retrieved
from the RIPE NCC RIS and RouteViews Projects. The results are
updated on a daily basis.
For more information on the methodology we refer you to the slides of
the NANOG57 presentation about the BGP Visibility Scann
results are updated on a daily
> basis.
> For more information on the methodology we refer you to the slides of the
> NANOG57 presentation about the BGP Visibility Scanner:
> http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog57/presentations/Wednesday/wed.general.Lutu.BGP_visibility_scanner.19.pdf
presentation about the BGP Visibility Scanner:
http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog57/presentations/Wednesday/wed.general.Lutu.BGP_visibility_scanner.19.pdf
Also, you can check the RIPE labs article about the BGP Visibility
Scanner, available here:
https://labs.ripe.net/Members/andra_lutu/the-bgp-visibility
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