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The Internet Technology

Close To 735K Fraudulently Obtained IP Addresses Have Been Uncovered and Revoked (circleid.com) 30

The American Registry for Internet Numbers, Ltd. (ARIN) has won a legal case against an elaborate multi-year scheme to defraud the Internet community of approximately 735,000 IPv4 addresses, the organization has revealed. An anonymous reader writes: While the specifics of the findings are not released, John Curran, ARIN President and CEO said the fraud was detected as a result of an internal due diligence process. ARIN is a nonprofit member-based organization responsible for distributing Internet number resources in the US, Canada, and parts of the Caribbean. The emerging IPv4 address transfer market and increasing demand have resulted in more attempts to obtain IPv4 addresses fraudulently. This is the first arbitration ever brought under an ARIN Registration Services Agreement, and related proceedings in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. ARIN was able to prove an intricate scheme to fraudulently obtained resources that included many falsely notarized officer attestations sent to ARIN.
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Close To 735K Fraudulently Obtained IP Addresses Have Been Uncovered and Revoked

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  • Does this mean we're not out of IPv4 addresses anymore? Death to IPv6!!

    • We have already run out of IPv4 addresses. In the same way the city centre of London has run out of buildable land. IPv4 addresses can only be bought from an existing owner. BTW I still can't understand why clients need a real IPv4 address. If your site can't handle IPv6 clients, it's your problem. As long as people can get on-demand access to IPv4, what's the problem?
      • BTW I still can't understand why clients need a real IPv4 address. If your site can't handle IPv6 clients, it's your problem.

        Clients haven't had "real IPv4" addresses in a while many thanks to CG-NAT devices. As to why *some* clients still need it, because people may not have the choice in how they access the internet.

        I don't get IPv6 addresses from a Hotel or from an airport hotspot. Should I give up on the idea of running a cloud host on my home network as a result?

        Creating demand is one thing, artificially breaking the internet to create demand will only create one kind of demand: the demand to revert the changes you made whic

  • Who was the perp?

    • by marcle ( 1575627 )

      RTFA

    • by yusing ( 216625 )

      "UPDATE May 15, 2019: "Charleston Man and Business Indicted in Federal Court in Over $9M Fraud" – United States Department of Justice issues a statement annoucing Amir Golestan, 36, of Charleston, and Micfo, LLC, were charged in federal court in a twenty-count indictment. The indictment charges twenty counts of wire fraud, with each count punishable by up to 20 years imprisonment. "

  • The guy created or bought companies for the sole purpose of getting IPv4 address allocations from ARIN and sell the addresses for money. To make the companies look legitimate, he created web sites for them and posed as several different people. Per ARIN's rules, organizations need to demonstrate eligibility to receive allocations. Falsely claiming eligibility is of course fraud.

  • by shentino ( 1139071 ) <shentino@gmail.com> on Thursday May 16, 2019 @08:33AM (#58602194)

    The problem is that IPs are supposed to be a public resource, but companies that got them in the times of plenty are now hoarding them as windfall gold mines and trying to milk them for every last dollar they can.

    The fact that ARIN had to go to court sealed our doom, because ARIN should have been able to revoke them unilaterally for non-usage.

    If ARIN and other registries were able to revoke addresses for nonuse we wouldn't be in this bind.

    • No, that's not the problem. The problem is that there's only 4 billion v4 addresses, whereas there are more like 20+ billion devices to number at the moment (estimated to rise to 100+ billion in less than a decade, and I doubt that growth will stop there).

      v4 is too small. It doesn't matter how much shuffling and slicing and dicing and rearranging you do to it; it's still going to be too small.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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