KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508 is a Kazakhstan‑based routing identity (AS216150) appearing in public BGP and registry records with a single /24 prefix. The evidence does not verify a company, institution, or individual operator beyond the routing context; the name Nurmukan Zhantorin remains unconfirmed beyond directory labels. Its relevance is as a low‑impact routing watchpoint: changes in prefix advertisement, RPKI validation, or registry records would alter the assessment. Data gaps include the missing RIPE AUT‑NUM detail, no official operator page, and unresolved route count discrepancies. Until more evidence emerges, treat as a monitoring candidate, not a verified institutional actor.
The subject functions as a registry identity and BGP route origin for AS216150 in Kazakhstan. Public sources show it originates the prefix 217.60.24.0/24 and appears in third-party routing databases. There is no confirmed company, institution, or internet service provider behind the label; the available evidence supports only monitoring of its network-numbering context and routing behaviour.
BTW tracks this identity because even a lightly attested ASN can produce detectable routing events. A withdrawal, re-announcement, RPKI validation change, or transfer of its sole prefix would be observable by networks that filter or propagate the route. Monitoring AS216150 provides early warning of address-space churn in Kazakhstan and may reveal the emergence of a genuine operator behind the registry entry.
BTW tracks this identity because even a lightly attested ASN can produce detectable routing events. A withdrawal, re-announcement, RPKI validation change, or transfer of its sole prefix would be observable by networks that filter or propagate the route. Monitoring AS216150 provides early warning of address-space churn in Kazakhstan and may reveal the emergence of a genuine operator behind the registry entry.
The subject functions as a registry identity and BGP route origin for AS216150 in Kazakhstan. Public sources show it originates the prefix 217.60.24.0/24 and appears in third-party routing databases. There is no confirmed company, institution, or internet service provider behind the label; the available evidence supports only monitoring of its network-numbering context and routing behaviour.
The impact mechanism is narrow: if AS216150 ceases to originate or loses RPKI validation for 217.60.24.0/24, downstream networks that accept the route may experience minor reachability disruptions for that /24 block. A new prefix announcement or a change in the ASN’s registry status would alter the address attribution. Because the footprint is tiny, broad internet impact is unlikely, but the signal is meaningful for routing-intelligence monitoring.
KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508 is a Kazakhstan‑based routing identity (AS216150) appearing in public BGP and registry records with a single /24 prefix. The evidence does not verify a company, institution, or individual operator beyond the routing context; the name Nurmukan Zhantorin remains unconfirmed beyond directory labels. Its relevance is as a low‑impact routing watchpoint: changes in prefix advertisement, RPKI validation, or registry records would alter the assessment. Data gaps include the missing RIPE AUT‑NUM detail, no official operator page, and unresolved route count discrepancies. Until more evidence emerges, treat as a monitoring candidate, not a verified institutional actor.
The impact mechanism is narrow: if AS216150 ceases to originate or loses RPKI validation for 217.60.24.0/24, downstream networks that accept the route may experience minor reachability disruptions for that /24 block. A new prefix announcement or a change in the ASN’s registry status would alter the address attribution. Because the footprint is tiny, broad internet impact is unlikely, but the signal is meaningful for routing-intelligence monitoring.
| 0.90–1.00 | A | High — direct sources |
| 0.75–0.89 | A/B | Strong |
| 0.55–0.74 | B/C | Medium |
| 0.35–0.54 | C/D | Weak–medium |
| 0.10–0.34 | D | Weak signal |
| 0.00–0.09 | D | Internal monitoring |
Several public sources
KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508
KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508 is a small BGP route origin (AS216150) registered in Kazakhstan, publicly associated with the name Nurmukan Zhantorin. It advertises a single /24 IPv4 prefix and maintains a minimal routing footprint evident in the CIDR Report, bgp.tools, and IPinfo. The entity behind the ASN is unverified; no corporate registration, operator website, or personal biography exists in indexed public sources.
Its relevance lies in monitoring for routing changes that could signal address-space shifts or ownership changes.
Why It Matters
The impact mechanism is narrow: if AS216150 ceases to originate or loses RPKI validation for 217.60.24.0/24, downstream networks that accept the route may experience minor reachability disruptions for that /24 block. A new prefix announcement or a change in the ASN’s registry status would alter the address attribution. Because the footprint is tiny, broad internet impact is unlikely, but the signal is meaningful for routing-intelligence monitoring.
What Public Sources Show
KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508 is a small route-origin identity under AS216150 in Kazakhstan. Routing databases associate the ASN with the name Nurmukan Zhantorin, though no independent verification of the individual or any organisation behind the label exists. The identity’s known footprint consists of a single /24 IPv4 prefix and minimal peering, making it a marginal presence in the global routing table and better suited as a monitoring signal than a full institutional profile.
The 30 May 2026 CIDR Report listed AS216150 among newly added ASes, carrying one prefix. bgp.tools reports a peer signal and 256-address IPv4 space indication. IPinfo shows 217.60.24.0/24 originated by AS216150, with an EternityCloud label, and confirms the block responds as Nurmukan Zhantorin. Together these sources establish a narrow but consistent picture of the routing identity.
A route-count conflict exists: IPGeolocation’s Kazakhstan ASN table records zero routes for AS216150, contradicting the CIDR Report, bgp.tools, and IPinfo. No website, service catalogue, or legal registration was found. The RIPE AUT-NUM object is not visible in indexed sources. The discrepancy and lack of corporate documentation reinforce that the entity behind the ASN remains unverified.
The operating surface is confined to registry entries and BGP advertisements. The only authority surface that can be inferred is potential administrative control over the ASN object and the capacity to originate or withdraw the /24 prefix. No customer-facing service, interconnection agreements, or additional infrastructure is documented. All public signals are passive routing-plane artefacts.
Even a lightly attested ASN can generate observable routing events. If 217.60.24.0/24 is withdrawn, re-announced by a different ASN, or has its RPKI validation state altered, networks that accept or filter the route may experience reachability changes for that block. The event is small in scope, but it provides a traceable signal of address-space churn in Kazakhstan and could indicate the emergence of a real operator behind the label.
Watchpoints centre on changes in the BGP announcement for 217.60.24.0/24, shifts in any RPKI ROA covering the prefix, updates to the AS216150 registry record, or the appearance of a self-published operator page. Any of these would raise or lower the identity’s significance. Prolonged inactivity or prefix removal without replacement would push it into irrelevance.
Uncertainty remains high. The name Nurmukan Zhantorin may represent a living operator, a registry artefact, or a label used by another entity. Until direct public evidence links the name to a verifiable individual or organisation, the profile cannot be promoted beyond a routing watchpoint. Readers should treat the identity as a signal, not an institutional profile.
Operating Surface
The subject functions as a registry identity and BGP route origin for AS216150 in Kazakhstan. Public sources show it originates the prefix 217.60.24.0/24 and appears in third-party routing databases. There is no confirmed company, institution, or internet service provider behind the label; the available evidence supports only monitoring of its network-numbering context and routing behaviour.
BTW tracks this identity because even a lightly attested ASN can produce detectable routing events. A withdrawal, re-announcement, RPKI validation change, or transfer of its sole prefix would be observable by networks that filter or propagate the route. Monitoring AS216150 provides early warning of address-space churn in Kazakhstan and may reveal the emergence of a genuine operator behind the registry entry.
Watchpoints
The identity is a faint signal in Kazakhstan's routing landscape. Its value lies in its status as a newly listed ASN with a small but traceable prefix; changes will be the first public indication of a shift in control or the appearance of a genuine operator. Monitor for registry updates that would link it to known organisations.
Concrete watchpoints: (1) BGP announcement of 217.60.24.0/24 going silent or being announced by another ASN; (2) creation or deletion of a RPKI ROA for that prefix; (3) a new organisation name or abuse contact in the RIPE AUT-NUM object; (4) appearance of a PeeringDB record or operator website; (5) association with a known hosting or cloud brand such as EternityCloud.
The full RIPE AUT-NUM object is not publicly indexed. No company record, financial filings, or operator biography has been located. Direct verification of the individual behind the name Nurmukan Zhantorin is missing. The relationship, if any, to EternityCloud or Quantumbeam Communications remains unsourced.
Sources
- Registry RDAP / WHOIS record - public-source identity and registry context for KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508.
- RIPE registry record - RIPE describes its database as containing network registration information, routing policy publications, coordination details, reverse DNS provisioning data, and research-supporting topology information for the RIPE NCC service region.
- cidr-report.org - The 30 May 2026 CIDR Report lists AS216150 as KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508 - Nurmukan Zhantorin, KZ, in the ASes-added section with one prefix.
- bgp.tools - bgp.tools lists AS216150 under Kazakhstan as Nurmukan Zhantorin, with one peer signal, one prefix-cone signal, and a 256-address IPv4-space ranking signal.
- ipinfo.io - IPinfo's 217.60.24.0/22 overlapping-ranges view lists 217.60.24.0/24 under AS216150 with an EternityCloud label and shows a pingable 217.60.24.0 entry as AS216150 Nurmukan Zhantorin.
- ipgeolocation.io - IPGeolocation's Kazakhstan ASN list includes AS216150 as Nurmukan Zhantorin, KZ, while reporting zero IPv4 and IPv6 routes, creating a route-count discrepancy against CIDR Report, bgp.tools, and IPinfo observations.
Domain of operation
KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508 is a small BGP route origin (AS216150) registered in Kazakhstan, publicly associated with the name Nurmukan Zhantorin. It advertises a single /24 IPv4 prefix and maintains a minimal routing footprint evident in the CIDR Report, bgp.tools, and IPinfo. The entity behind the ASN is unverified; no corporate registration, operator website, or personal biography exists in indexed public sources. Its relevance lies in monitoring for routing changes that could signal address-space shifts or ownership changes.
- Registry RDAP / WHOIS record: public-source identity and registry context for KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508. Evidence basis: source-44a6a0ca234f
Timeline
- KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508 public evidence observed
BTW tracks this identity because even a lightly attested ASN can produce detectable routing events. A withdrawal, re-announcement, RPKI validation change, or transfer of its sole prefix would be observable by networks that filter or propagate the route. Monitoring AS216150 provides early warning of address-space churn in Kazakhstan and may reveal the emergence of a genuine operator behind the registry entry.
At A Glance
- Name: KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508
- Type: Network-related institution
- Base: KZ
- Profile focus: Institution
What It Does
- public operating records
- official service pages
- source-backed relationship updates
Why It Matters
- The impact mechanism is narrow: if AS216150 ceases to originate or loses RPKI validation for 217.60.24.0/24, downstream networks that accept the route may experience minor reachability disruptions for that /24 block. A new prefix announcement or a change in the ASN’s registry status would alter the address attribution. Because the footprint is tiny, broad internet impact is unlikely, but the signal is meaningful for routing-intelligence monitoring.
- Operational criticality: Medium
- Time horizon: Next quarter
What To Watch
- official company sources
- public registries
- operator-published records
Track verified source updates, role changes, and current public evidence.
The impact mechanism is narrow: if AS216150 ceases to originate or loses RPKI validation for 217.60.24.0/24, downstream networks that accept the route may experience minor reachability disruptions for that /24 block. A new prefix announcement or a change in the ASN’s registry status would alter the address attribution. Because the footprint is tiny, broad internet impact is unlikely, but the signal is meaningful for routing-intelligence monitoring.
Longer-term relevance depends on verified operating, policy, and relationship changes.
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The impact mechanism is narrow: if AS216150 ceases to originate or loses RPKI validation for 217.60.24.0/24, downstream networks that accept the route may experience minor reachability disruptions for that /24 block. A new prefix announcement or a change in the ASN’s registry status would alter the address attribution. Because the footprint is tiny, broad internet impact is unlikely, but the signal is meaningful for routing-intelligence monitoring.
Watchpoints
- The identity is a faint signal in Kazakhstan's routing landscape.
- Its value lies in its status as a newly listed ASN with a small but traceable prefix; changes will be the first public indication of a shift in control or the appearance of a genuine operator.
- Monitor for registry updates that would link it to known organisations.
Caveats
- Public evidence is used only for source-backed claims.
- Private control or contract claims require separate public support.
FAQ
Why does BTW track KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508?
BTW tracks this identity because even a lightly attested ASN can produce detectable routing events. A withdrawal, re-announcement, RPKI validation change, or transfer of its sole prefix would be observable by networks that filter or propagate the route. Monitoring AS216150 provides early warning of address-space churn in Kazakhstan and may reveal the emergence of a genuine operator behind the registry entry.
What evidence supports the profile?
public-source identity and registry context for KZ-NURMUKANZHAN-20260508.
What should readers watch next?
The identity is a faint signal in Kazakhstan's routing landscape.






