Randy Bush writes:
>> I believe we've seen bogus low AS number announcements a few times
>> before, and they've usually been caused by attemts to configure
>> AS path prepending without understanding and/or reading the docs.
>>
>> Someone might have wrongly assumed that
>>
>>set as-path pre
There is concern that the WHOIS database service will be in violation
of the new European GDPR which takes effect May 25th, and may have
to shut down.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/04/14/whois_icann_gdpr_europe/
https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/correspondence/jelinek-to-marby-11apr18-en.
On Sat, Apr 14, 2018 at 11:06 AM, Brian Kantor wrote:
> There is concern that the WHOIS database service will be in violation
> of the new European GDPR which takes effect May 25th, and may have
> to shut down.
>
> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/04/14/whois_icann_gdpr_europe/
>
> https://www.i
EURID (.eu) WHOIS already works on a basis that no information about the
registrant is available via standard WHOIS.
In order to get any useful information you have to go to
https://whois.eurid.eu and make a request there.
Seems like a reasonable solution.
--
Filip Hruska
Linux System Administ
On Sat, Apr 14, 2018 at 11:21 AM, Filip Hruska wrote:
> EURID (.eu) WHOIS already works on a basis that no information about the
> registrant is available via standard WHOIS.
> In order to get any useful information you have to go to
> https://whois.eurid.eu and make a request there.
>
> Seems li
Currently .eu and .gr domains do not have any whois records. .eu makes them
available online, but .gr is under a much stricter privacy law in Greece, and
makes no whois records available to anyone.
This has been so for years, and I can tell you of a few things / observations
about this, since
On Sat, Apr 14, 2018 at 02:21:59PM +, Filip Hruska wrote:
> EURID (.eu) WHOIS already works on a basis that no information about the
> registrant is available via standard WHOIS.
> In order to get any useful information you have to go to
> https://whois.eurid.eu and make a request there.
>
> S
On Sat, Apr 14, 2018 at 12:14 PM, Rich Kulawiec wrote:
>
> The only people served by restriction on WHOIS availability are abusers
> and attackers, and the entities (e.g., registrars) who profit from them.
>
Not that whois data for domain names has been particularly useful for the
past decade any
As far as IP Addresses go (and domains too), currently GDPR recognizes the
rights of individuals, not companies, which means that a company can be in the
whois query, since it does not have the right to privacy.
My understanding is that this will only affect natural persons.
> On 14 Apr 2018,
* Filip Hruska:
> EURID (.eu) WHOIS already works on a basis that no information about the
> registrant is available via standard WHOIS.
> In order to get any useful information you have to go to
> https://whois.eurid.eu and make a request there.
>
> Seems like a reasonable solution.
Why? How
If you register a corp out of Nevada, the only person who gets to know the
names of the owners is the company lawyer unless someone shows up with a
warrant. It costs around $1,200 if I remember correctly.
So I can spin up a legit looking company and put that info into whois and
you essentially en
On Sat, Apr 14, 2018 at 2:24 PM, DaKnOb wrote:
> As far as IP Addresses go (and domains too), currently GDPR recognizes the
> rights of individuals, not companies, which means that a company can be in
> the whois query, since it does not have the right to privacy.
>
> My understanding is that thi
On 04/14/2018 10:24 AM, DaKnOb wrote:
As far as IP Addresses go (and domains too), currently GDPR recognizes the
rights of individuals, not companies, which means that a company can be in the
whois query, since it does not have the right to privacy.
My understanding is that this will only affe
On 04/14/2018 07:29 PM, Florian Weimer wrote:
* Filip Hruska:
EURID (.eu) WHOIS already works on a basis that no information about the
registrant is available via standard WHOIS.
In order to get any useful information you have to go to
https://whois.eurid.eu and make a request there.
Seems lik
On 04/14/2018 07:24 PM, DaKnOb wrote:
As far as IP Addresses go (and domains too), currently GDPR recognizes the
rights of individuals, not companies, which means that a company can be in the
whois query, since it does not have the right to privacy.
My understanding is that this will only aff
GDPR only has jurisdiction over individuals who are citizens of
countries which are members of the EU. About 27 countries out of
almost 200 in this world. And companies which manage that data and are
also within the EU's jurisdiction.
But that jurisdiction arises from an individual's EU nation
ci
On 04/14/2018 02:46 PM, b...@theworld.com wrote:
So why not just have a checkmark at domain registration which asks
whether you believe yourself to be within the EU's jurisdiction and,
if so, no WHOIS publication for you, or very limited.
FWIW, I've been reading quite a bit of (unverified) info
On Sat, Apr 14, 2018 at 6:46 PM, wrote:
>
> GDPR only has jurisdiction over individuals who are citizens of
> countries which are members of the EU. About 27 countries out of
> almost 200 in this world. And companies which manage that data and are
> also within the EU's jurisdiction.
>
>
Try find
On April 14, 2018 at 17:29 nanog@nanog.org (Aaron C. de Bruyn via NANOG) wrote:
> So why are you proposing that I can't run my *personal* "I strongly
> believe in {insert emotionally-charged issue} site" without letting psychos
> know exactly where I live?
I wasn't the one proposing but GDPR
On April 14, 2018 at 19:00 rube...@gmail.com (Rubens Kuhl) wrote:
>
>
> On Sat, Apr 14, 2018 at 6:46 PM, wrote:
>
>
> GDPR only has jurisdiction over individuals who are citizens of
> countries which are members of the EU. About 27 countries out of
> almost 200 in this wor
>Does anyone believe privacy etc will be enhanced by forbidding your
>finding out who owns this domain you were directed towards by a
>search engine?
>Granted you may not get a satisfactory answer but then maybe you
>choose not to do business with them, ok, your choice.
>But what if the response
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