Looking for verification that Google and Akamai have the geo-ip for 96.31.0.0/20 set correctly
Skywing
Skywing at valhallalegends.com
Mon Jan 5 00:23:39 UTC 2009
Any "security" provided (I must assume that you speak of fraud prevention services) is the probablistic sort, of reducing, for example, aggregate (and not specific) losses.
– S
-----Original Message-----
From: Greg Skinner <gds at gds.best.vwh.net>
Sent: Sunday, January 04, 2009 15:52
To: Martin Hannigan <martin at theicelandguy.com>
Cc: nanog at nanog.org <nanog at nanog.org>
Subject: Re: Looking for verification that Google and Akamai have the geo-ip for 96.31.0.0/20 set correctly
On Sat, Jan 03, 2009 at 01:31:28AM -0500, Martin Hannigan wrote:
> Overall, geo location has turned out to be a somewhat valuable tool in terms
> of language, fraud, and localization. I think that it's important to
> continue to urge improvements in this technology, not divestment.
I don't see how this technology can be improved past a certain point,
because the criteria that are used to determine location are only
coincidentally tied to location (they are the result of administrative
policy and/or configuration). At best, they provide a false sense of
"security".
--gregbo
More information about the NANOG
mailing list