Gestion Informatique Sysmic Inc. is an ARIN-registered organisation with handle GIS-50 that holds no active internet number resources and has no operational network presence. If the organisation obtains an ASN, announces IP prefixes, or builds operational infrastructure, it would become a new BGP origin. Networks that accept those routes would depend on the organisation's routing decisions, potentially affecting global reachability, traffic paths, and routing security within its connectivity region.
The organisation exists only as a Whois record; it has the administrative capacity to request IP addresses and AS numbers from ARIN but currently exercises no operational network control.
Gestion Informatique Sysmic Inc. is an ARIN-registered organisation with handle GIS-50 that holds no active internet number resources and has no operational network presence. If the organisation obtains an ASN, announces IP prefixes, or builds operational infrastructure, it would become a new BGP origin. Networks that accept those routes would depend on the organisation's routing decisions, potentially affecting global reachability, traffic paths, and routing security within its connectivity region.
The organisation exists only as a Whois record; it has the administrative capacity to request IP addresses and AS numbers from ARIN but currently exercises no operational network control.
The organisation exists only as a Whois record; it has the administrative capacity to request IP addresses and AS numbers from ARIN but currently exercises no operational network control.
Changes in registry, routing, service footprint, or public role can alter visibility, dependency assessment, and escalation paths for infrastructure readers.
Gestion Informatique Sysmic Inc. is an ARIN-registered organisation with handle GIS-50 that holds no active internet number resources and has no operational network presence. If the organisation obtains an ASN, announces IP prefixes, or builds operational infrastructure, it would become a new BGP origin. Networks that accept those routes would depend on the organisation's routing decisions, potentially affecting global reachability, traffic paths, and routing security within its connectivity region.
