Unfortunately yes. However it doesn’t mean that we shouldn’t discuss this, work on solutions and don’t let this die. Some interim solutions might be good to be deployed, like warp. At least they would serve as statistic or wall of shame. This might only see the sunlight when some government, regulator or some “critical” infrastructure around here gets hijacked, and the collaborative isps/upstreams properly bashed and prosecuted. Nuno Vieira No dia 10/09/2019, às 12:26, Suresh Ramasubramanian <ops.lists@gmail.com> escreveu:
You are right. I have very little hope of anything concrete coming out of this process, however.
On 10/09/19, 4:04 PM, "anti-abuse-wg on behalf of Sérgio Rocha" <anti-abuse-wg-bounces@ripe.net on behalf of sergio.rocha@makeitsimple.pt> wrote:
Hi,
I agree with Carlos. It is better to have an imperfect policy than not to have any policy and watch these hijacks helplessly in the front row.
I can't understand why some people resist having a policy that create a response to those who break the chain of trust on which the internet is based, we can't keep looking at abusers and think it's okay, one of this days will be your network, your client.
There are many hijacks that are claimed by the true owners of space and we cannot let these abusers, usually are always the same, remain members, we need to have policies to fight.
At RIPE meetings I always hear a lot of people talking about the inability to have any response to these events and when we hear the impact of these actions we realize than something has to be done, it may be not consensual a first version, but all supporters are certain that improvements will be made in the future.
Finally, if we do not want nations and governmental laws to regulate the internet, it has to be via entities like RIPE to bring regulation, otherwise we will lose control of the internet and it will start to be controlled by governments. (they are waiting for us to fail)
Regards, Sérgio
-----Original Message----- From: anti-abuse-wg [mailto:anti-abuse-wg-bounces@ripe.net] On Behalf Of Carlos Friaças via anti-abuse-wg Sent: 10 de setembro de 2019 08:26 To: Jacob Slater <jacob@rezero.org> Cc: anti-abuse-wg@ripe.net Subject: Re: [anti-abuse-wg] 2019-03 Review Phase (Resource Hijacking is a RIPE Policy Violation)
Hello,
As the RIPE NCC's IA shows (imho), the proposed process is not perfect.
The main goal of having a process to start with was to allow some action regarding evident cases, and i hope people will agree that significant effort was made to accomodate comments during v1's discussion.
We tried to add more "safety knobs", because we felt that a wrong decision (by experts) would be a really, really bad thing, and we wanted to avoid that -- even knowing that sometimes even courts do get it wrong _and_ that ONE 'guilty of hijacking' case wouldn't result immediately in a LIR terminating process.
In the case there were no doubts that someone/some company was doing this (i.e. a 'guilty' conclusion), the expected outcome would be for that member to stop that behaviour from that point forward.
Regards, Carlos
On Mon, 9 Sep 2019, Jacob Slater wrote:
All, Sure, but stat.ripe.net, bgp.he.net, rpki, and many other sources are free for everyone to access. :-)
Having a copy of the table and see historical data doesn't automatically give one the ability to determine if a given announcement was a hijack. I might strongly suspect that it was - sure. My personal suspicions should not be enough in this instance.
Honestly, i handed it back in late April. The IA and publishing took some time... :-) What i think supports what i wrote above is in Section 7.0, clause 1: "The RIPE NCC will verify that a report contains sufficient information before assigning it to a group of experts. If this is not the case, the report will be dismissed."
Maybe it could be a bit clearer, or we could textually add "one event or a handful of events is not enough".
Stating that a single report isn't enough doesn't solve the issue. A thousand reports might not give enough quality information to justify an investigation; a single report from an authoritative source might. It is for this reason that - in order to save resources - I'm concerned with the amount of people who could potentially submit a report.
Hence Section 7.0, clause 1 :-)
Section 7 of the current draft gives the accused the opportunity to defend themselves as the second step, right after the NCC "verifies" the request. The accused entity is still being "asked" (under pressure) to provide information on the basis of a report that may or may not have come from someone who actually knows about the situation.
Sure. And i have already read the IA. All of it.
OK. I've done the same. I still feel that the IA outlines a lot of issues and problems. At this time, I don't think that the potential benefits of the proposal outweigh the costs.
Jacob Slater
On Mon, Sep 9, 2019 at 5:56 PM Carlos Friaças <cfriacas@fccn.pt> wrote:
Hi,
On Mon, 9 Sep 2019, Jacob Slater wrote:
All, If it's *your* table, you should be able.
Again, I disagree. Just because you have a copy of the routing table doesn't automatically put you in a position to
know what is going on with each entry present in that table.
Sure, but stat.ripe.net, bgp.he.net, rpki, and many other sources are free for everyone to access. :-)
But please keep in mind than one event or a handful of events shouldn't justify an investigation, or handing a case to "experts".
The current policy proposal doesn't have text to support this.
Honestly, i handed it back in late April. The IA and publishing took some time... :-) What i think supports what i wrote above is in Section 7.0, clause 1: "The RIPE NCC will verify that a report contains sufficient information before assigning it to a group of experts. If this is not the case, the report will be dismissed."
Maybe it could be a bit clearer, or we could textually add "one event or a handful of events is not enough".
If the issue is fixed and the issue originator isn't always the same, then no real need for an investigation. Maybe the amount of text on the current version fades a bit the two main concepts of "persistent" and "intentional".
I am in agreement with you on this.
There should be enough "trail" to justify starting an investigation...
If the person submitting a report isn't in an authoritative position to say whether or not an announcement was a
hijack, there isn't a good enough "trail" to justify starting an investigation.
Hence Section 7.0, clause 1 :-)
The "proposal". It's just a proposal...! :-)
I agree that there isn't a way to measure how many people around the
world would not resort to hijacking if this proposal was in place today
My apologies for misspeaking on that one. Any references I may have made to 2019-3 as a "policy" should read as
"policy proposal".
No harm done :-)
Just because a policy proposal has the chance to discourage bad actors doesn't mean we should ignore the potential consequences of implementing the proposal.
Sure. And i have already read the IA. All of it.
Regards, Carlos
Jacob Slater
On Mon, Sep 9, 2019 at 5:25 PM Carlos Friaças <cfriacas@fccn.pt> wrote:
Hi,
On Mon, 9 Sep 2019, Jacob Slater wrote:
All, If that happens, then potentially everyone can be a victim, yes. Then they should be able to place a report.
I disagree. Just because you see what you think is a hijack in the full table doesn't mean you have enough
information to justify a full investigation that is likely to consume valuable time and resources.
If it's *your* table, you should be able. But please keep in mind than one event or a handful of events shouldn't justify an investigation, or handing a case to "experts".
Afaik, this is possible within LACNIC (i.e. through warp.lacnic.net). When the same proposal was discussed there, the yearly number of reports (if i'm not mistaken) was on the scale of dozens -- and they have a very high degree of helping stop/mitigate the incidents, almost close to 100%, which is fantastic!
Being asked to fix an issue is very different from getting investigated for an issue with the potential for
termination of membership.
If the issue is fixed and the issue originator isn't always the same, then no real need for an investigation. Maybe the amount of text on the current version fades a bit the two main concepts of "persistent" and "intentional".
While I haven't seen a proposal for establishing a system like LACNIC's WARP under RIPE, I'd be open to the idea.
Great. Does anyone think this is a bad idea?
That would probably fall under the ncc-services-wg, so we'll have to see :-)
I fail to identify exactly were the proposal describes such a need. Even so, the experts should be binded to NDAs... :-)
While having the experts under NDA is a step in the right direction, it still involves effectively being
required to turn information over to external parties due to the suspicions of some random AS. My concern isn't so much that the
information will be leaked; my concern is that, fundamentally, being required to turn information over to a third party on someone's unsupported suspicions seems wrong.
There should be enough "trail" to justify starting an investigation...
Right now, the policy seems to pull a large amount of resources and risk (per the impact analysis) without enough of a return.
The "proposal". It's just a proposal...! :-)
I agree that there isn't a way to measure how many people around the world would not resort to hijacking if this proposal was in place today :-)
Regards, Carlos
Jacob Slater
On Mon, Sep 9, 2019 at 3:45 PM Carlos Friaças <cfriacas@fccn.pt> wrote:
On Thu, 5 Sep 2019, Jacob Slater wrote:
All,
Hi Jacob, All,
Given the number of people who may submit a report (anyone receiving a full table from their upstream(s), assuming the accused hijack makes it into the DFZ),
If that happens, then potentially everyone can be a victim, yes. Then they should be able to place a report. But that's a fundamental part of why some changes are needed: it's not only the legitimate address space owner who is the victim of an hijack. People/networks whose packets are diverted by an hijack are also victims of traffic interception.
Afaik, this is possible within LACNIC (i.e. through warp.lacnic.net). When the same proposal was discussed there, the yearly number of reports (if i'm not mistaken) was on the scale of dozens -- and they have a very high degree of helping stop/mitigate the incidents, almost close to 100%, which is fantastic!
I'm still concerned that the proposed policy would cause more harm than good. A random AS that happens to receive the announcement isn't in an authoritative position to know if a given announcement was unauthorized.
I can fully agree that a system based on (possibly forged) LOAs, and unauthenticated IRR created the huge mess we are submerged in today... :(((
Putting them through a reporting process that might well require the disclosure of internal information because of an unrelated individual/group being suspicious is a problem.
I fail to identify exactly were the proposal describes such a need. Even so, the experts should be binded to NDAs... :-)
Regards, Carlos
Combined with the issues detailed in the Impact Analysis, I'm opposed to the policy as written.
Jacob Slater
On Thu, Sep 5, 2019 at 9:24 AM Marco Schmidt <mschmidt@ripe.net> wrote: Dear colleagues,
Policy proposal 2019-03, "Resource Hijacking is a RIPE Policy Violation" is now in the Review Phase.
The goal of this proposal is to define that BGP hijacking is not accepted as normal practice within the RIPE NCC service region.
The proposal has been updated following the last round of discussion and is now at version v2.0. Some of the changes made to version v1.0 include: - Includes procedural steps for reporting and evaluation of potential hijacks - Provides guidelines for external experts - Adjusted title
The RIPE NCC has prepared an impact analysis on this latest proposal version to support the community?s discussion. You can find the full proposal and impact analysis at: https://www.ripe.net/participate/policies/proposals/2019-03 https://www.ripe.net/participate/policies/proposals/2019-03#impact-analysis
And the draft documents at: https://www.ripe.net/participate/policies/proposals/2019-03/draft
As per the RIPE Policy Development Process (PDP), the purpose of this four week Review Phase is to continue discussion of the proposal, taking the impact analysis into consideration, and to review the full draft RIPE Policy Document.
At the end of the Review Phase, the Working Group (WG) Chairs will determine whether the WG has reached rough consensus. It is therefore important to provide your opinion, even if it is simply a restatement of your input from the previous phase.
We encourage you to read the proposal, impact analysis and draft document and send any comments to <anti-abuse-wg@ripe.net> before 4 October 2019.
Kind regards,
Marco Schmidt Policy Officer RIPE NCC