b.root-servers.net

Mark Jones markjo at netins.net
Tue Feb 3 16:53:18 UTC 2004


On Tue, 03 Feb 2004 14:01:45 GMT
Barry Margolin <barmar at alum.mit.edu> wrote:
> In article <bvo88e$rr4$1 at sf1.isc.org>, bill <bmanning at karoshi.com> 
> wrote:
> Did you get a new address block that used to belong to someone that was 
> blacklisted?  Maybe if you find the blacklist you're in you can get it 
> fixed, and the ISPs that use the blacklist will clear their filters.

Checking http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/ip4r.ch?ip=192.228.79.201
it doesn't seem to be publicly listed anywhere.

I don't find anything in 192.228.79/24 listed in the 20 public blocklists
I usually query.

http://isc.sans.org/source_report.html shows no-one complaining about
192.228/16, but I think that's current, not historical.

News.admin.net-abuse.* shows scattered reports of spam from 192.228/16
over the years. Most problematic were (are) 192.228.128/24, where
jaring.my was running open relays since 1998 (still ongoing?), and a lot
of spam from 192.228.33.50 (start Nov 2002, still ongoing), most of the
rest of the spam complaints are scattered throughout 192.228.128/17. I
didn't see any reference to 192.228.79/24.

It's anybody's guess what could be in private blocklists.

Mark A Jones
Systems Administrator
netINS, Inc.   http://netins.net
(515) 830-0698   markjo at netins.net



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