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MANRS | Internet Society
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All posts tagged: MANRS
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Members of the Internet Society Asia-Pacific Bureau team - Rajnesh Singh, Amelia Yeo and Naveed Haq (and joined by Kevin Meynell from the Deploy360 Team) - had a super busy and productive week at the APRICOT 2016 conference in Auckland, New Zealand. The Asia Pacific Regional Internet Conference on Operational Technologies (APRICOT) is the premier forum that brings together regional Internet builders and operators to learn from their peers and experts from around the world. ISOC’s Asia-Pacific Bureau is a long time partner of APRICOT and sponsors the...Date published 05 March 2016
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The Internet Society’s Andrei Robachevsky recently discussed with IDG News Service Collaborative Security, MANRS, and how we can work together to make the Internet’s routing system a safer and more stable place. In “Fixing the Internet's routing security is urgent and requires collaboration,” Andrei and others discuss anti-spoofing, DDoS attacks, and more. Regarding MANRS, specifically, here’s a snippet of the article: “Implementing the MANRS recommendations, which are based on existing industry best practices, can have some short-term costs for ISPs, but according to ISOC, that's probably...Date published 01 March 2016
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How do you get a community effort off the ground and make it a success? How do we even define success? Is it the number of participants, general awareness beyond its participants, or new parallel activities that the effort stimulates? Last week during NANOG 66, several MANRS participants met to discuss the challenges we want to address in 2016 and beyond that are critical to the success of this effort. Someone recently commented that MANRS will start paying off when it begins to motivate network operators to implement the outlined Actions in order to join the initiative. That is, indeed, our...Date published 18 February 2016
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The Internet’s root servers sustained a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack last week that is gathering quite a bit of media attention. We once again call on all network operators to consider implementing the actions outlined in the Mutually Agreed Norms for Routing Security (MANRS) document and signing on as supporters of the MANRS initiative. Specifically, in this case we encourage Action #2: Prevent traffic with spoofed source IP addresses. "Network operator implements a system that enables source address validation for at least single-homed stub customer networks, their own end-...Date published 10 December 2015
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Two weeks ago, we organized a panel discussion on the Mutually Agreed Norms for Routing Security (“MANRS”) document at NANOG65 in Montreal. It was wonderful to see that three MANRS participants - Tony Tauber (Comcast), Job Snijders (NTT), and Rob Hagens (Zayo) - were on the panel discussing some important aspects of MANRS and routing security in general. Andree Toonk from BGPmon.net also participated, providing an overview of the security landscape. Perhaps the most important questions were: (a) Why join MANRS? and (b) What difference can it make? I think the takeaways from this discussion...Date published 19 October 2015
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Why and what kind of collective effort is needed to improve the security and resilience of the global Internet routing system? This will be the topic today at NANOG 65 in Montreal during the Security track from 11:30-1:00 EDT. Our Andrei Robachevsky is moderating a panel is named "How can we work together to improve security and resilience of the global routing system?" and the panelists include: Andrei Robachevsky (Internet Society), moderator Job Snijders (NTT) Rob Hagens (Zayo) Andree Toonk (BGPmon) Tony Tauber (Comcast) One of the approaches to addressing this question is...Date published 06 October 2015
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Routing incidents happen all the time, but for an individual average network operator they seem somewhat infrequent. When these routing incidents happen, though, they have real – and negative – consequences. Does this infrequency mean we don’t have to worry? Here we outline three reasons why network operators MUST be concerned about routing security incidents. Background A year ago, the Internet Society and BGPmon conducted a routing resilience survey focused on collecting routing incident data from operators’ points of view. It showed that many network operators have routing security...Date published 24 July 2015
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Photo: android - google space CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 Next week I’ll be at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, talking about pervasive monitoring and additional Internet encryption, increasing routing security and resilience through the MANRS initiative, and growing IPv6 deployments in mobile operator networks. I encourage you to also read my colleague's blog post yesterday about Kathy Brown's keynote on the Economics of Internet Governance and Michael Kende's panel on the regulatory enablers and obstacles to innovation of and for the mobile Internet. For today, though, I'll focus on our...Date published 27 February 2015
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Last February at APRICOT 2014 our team organized a NetOps workshop where I presented an idea for an initiative called the Routing Resilience Manifesto. I called the presentation "Collective responsibility and collaboration for routing security and resilience," which, in fact, captured the objective of the Manifesto. Since then, we successfully launched the initiative (in November 2014) with nine network operators signing on to the recommended actions on day one. That list has now grown now to almost 20 operators. The primary recommendations document within the Routing Resilience Manifesto...Date published 25 February 2015
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Routing security incidents happen - for many network operators probably at least once a month, and probably close to 5% of those incidents have real (and negative) network impacts. And though overall the routing system tends to be pretty quiet, some networks have really bad days sometimes. These are some of the results from the Routing Resilience Survey Report we just released from our pilot project to analyze routing security incidents and their real-world impacts. At the end of 2013 we launched, in partnership with BGPmon, a pilot project called the Routing Resilience Survey. As I explained...Date published 15 December 2014
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