Institution Profiling / Network-related institution

MooN-NeT

MooN-NeT controls the AS210476 entry in PeeringDB and the moonnet.ps domain, making it a latent registry presence in Palestinian internet infrastructure. Without any announced IP prefixes, its operational role remains undefined, and its public authority surface is limited to these two digital artifacts.

MooN-NeT
Caption: A conceptual dashboard reflecting the current public footprint of MooN-NeT—visible registry data but no active routing. · Source context: AI-generated conceptual image for BTW editorial use. · Relevance reason: The image visualizes the core intelligence thesis: MooN-NeT exists in public registries but remains operationally silent, warranting monitoring. · Image provenance: AI-generated conceptual image for BTW editorial use.

Sources

Public references used for this article.

  • PeeringDB network profilePeeringDB records identify MooN-NeT as the registrant of AS210476 and provide registry context. (source risk: low)
  • Operator websiteThe official website moonnet.ps confirms the organization's online presence and supports the.ps domain linkage. (source risk: low)
CategoryInstitution

MooN-NeT controls the AS210476 entry in PeeringDB and the moonnet.ps domain, making it a latent registry presence in Palestinian internet infrastructure. Without any announced IP prefixes, its operational role remains undefined, and its public authority surface is limited to these two digital artifacts.

RegionPalestinian Territories

Changes to AS210476’s registry holder, a first BGP prefix announcement, or a substantive website update would alter how analysts map operational responsibility, reachability, and infrastructure dependencies within the Palestinian Territories. Tracking this dormant entity helps avoid surprise from a new network entrant in a politically sensitive connectivity environment.

Signal FocusNetwork-related institution

Changes to AS210476’s registry holder, a first BGP prefix announcement, or a substantive website update would alter how analysts map operational responsibility, reachability, and infrastructure dependencies within the Palestinian Territories. Tracking this dormant entity helps avoid surprise from a new network entrant in a politically sensitive connectivity environment.

Content TypeProfile

MooN-NeT controls the AS210476 entry in PeeringDB and the moonnet.ps domain, making it a latent registry presence in Palestinian internet infrastructure. Without any announced IP prefixes, its operational role remains undefined, and its public authority surface is limited to these two digital artifacts.

Primary DomainInfrastructure

If MooN-NeT begins announcing IP prefixes, it would become an active participant in Palestinian internet connectivity, introducing new routing dependencies and forcing a reassessment of regional network topology and risk. Even a registry reassignment could signal a change of control, affecting resource attribution models and geopolitical mapping of internet assets.

TopicNetwork-related institution

MooN-NeT is a Palestinian Territories-linked institution holding AS210476 without active prefix announcements. Its public footprint is limited to PeeringDB and a website, leaving services, customers, and personnel undocumented. The main observables are registry changes or routing activation, which would signal new operational weight. Until then, it remains a low-certainty pre-operational holder with a potential geopolitical footprint.

ImpactMedium

If MooN-NeT begins announcing IP prefixes, it would become an active participant in Palestinian internet connectivity, introducing new routing dependencies and forcing a reassessment of regional network topology and risk. Even a registry reassignment could signal a change of control, affecting resource attribution models and geopolitical mapping of internet assets.

Confidence?Confidence Grade
0.90–1.00AHigh — direct sources
0.75–0.89A/BStrong
0.55–0.74B/CMedium
0.35–0.54C/DWeak–medium
0.10–0.34DWeak signal
0.00–0.09DInternal monitoring
Good confidence (80%)

Several public sources

MooN-NeT is a Palestinian Territories-linked institution holding AS210476 without active prefix announcements. Its public footprint is limited to PeeringDB and a website, leaving services, customers, and personnel undocumented. The main observables are registry changes or routing activation, which would signal new operational weight. Until then, it remains a low-certainty pre-operational holder with a potential geopolitical footprint.

MooN-NeT

MooN-NeT is a dormant autonomous system holder in the Palestinian Territories, registered as AS210476 and owner of moonnet.ps, with no active routing announcements observed. Its future activation or registry changes could introduce new routing dependencies in a geopolitically sensitive region, but current evidence supports only a registry presence.

Why It Matters

If MooN-NeT begins announcing IP prefixes, it would become an active participant in Palestinian internet connectivity, introducing new routing dependencies and forcing a reassessment of regional network topology and risk. Even a registry reassignment could signal a change of control, affecting resource attribution models and geopolitical mapping of internet assets.

What Public Sources Show

MooN-NeT is a Palestinian Territories-linked institution that holds autonomous system number AS210476 and operates the website moonnet.ps. It has never announced any IP prefixes, so it currently exerts no influence on regional routing. Dormancy is the central analytical fact. If the entity ever begins routing, it could introduce new connectivity dependencies in a geopolitically sensitive part of the internet.

Until then, its public footprint is limited to a registry record and a dormant domain.

Only two public sources exist. The PeeringDB profile for AS210476 identifies MooN-NeT as the registrant. The website at moonnet.ps confirms its online presence and ties it to the.ps domain. No prefix announcements from AS210476 have been observed in public BGP data. No service descriptions, customer references, or personnel names appear anywhere in the evidence.

The entity controls two observable resources: the AS210476 registration in PeeringDB and the moonnet.ps domain. Modifications to either—such as a new registrant or DNS change—would signal operational intent or a change of control. Without active routing, the entity exercises no actual network control surface; its authority is confined to these registry artifacts.

Analysts should track three signals. First, any change to the AS210476 holder or contacts in PeeringDB or RIR records could indicate a transfer of ownership. Second, the first IP prefix originated by AS210476 would confirm live operations and require immediate dependency analysis. Third, substantive updates to moonnet.ps—adding services, pricing, or contacts—would help clarify the institution’s purpose and scale.

Public records do not reveal the legal structure, ownership, location, or personnel of MooN-NeT. No revenue model, customer base, or contract position can be established. The assessment is limited to registry visibility. Without new evidence, claims about commercial activity or geopolitical alignment would be speculative. The dormant status is the only supported operating condition.

Operating Surface

MooN-NeT controls the AS210476 entry in PeeringDB and the moonnet.ps domain, making it a latent registry presence in Palestinian internet infrastructure. Without any announced IP prefixes, its operational role remains undefined, and its public authority surface is limited to these two digital artifacts.

Changes to AS210476’s registry holder, a first BGP prefix announcement, or a substantive website update would alter how analysts map operational responsibility, reachability, and infrastructure dependencies within the Palestinian Territories. Tracking this dormant entity helps avoid surprise from a new network entrant in a politically sensitive connectivity environment.

Watchpoints

MooN-NeT represents a dormant but geopolitically sensitive pre-operational holding. Its activation would signal new network capability in the Palestinian Territories, potentially linked to state or commercial expansion. Tracking it alongside other regional ASNs reduces surprise and supports early dependency mapping.

First BGP route announcement from AS210476; any change in registrant or technical contact in PeeringDB or RIR records; substantive updates to moonnet.ps that detail services or personnel. Fresh routing or registry evidence would raise its operational significance.

No active BGP announcements, so current routing posture is unknown. No legal, ownership, or location data. No evidence of services, customers, or revenue. Without these, the entity's actual role remains speculative. Future collection should monitor routing tables, registry changes, and the website for any first signal of activity.

Sources

  • PeeringDB network profile - PeeringDB records identify MooN-NeT as the registrant of AS210476 and provide registry context.
  • Operator website - The official website moonnet.ps confirms the organization's online presence and supports the.ps domain linkage.

Domain of operation

MooN-NeT is a dormant autonomous system holder in the Palestinian Territories, registered as AS210476 and owner of moonnet.ps, with no active routing announcements observed. Its future activation or registry changes could introduce new routing dependencies in a geopolitically sensitive region, but current evidence supports only a registry presence.

  • PeeringDB network profile: PeeringDB records identify MooN-NeT as the registrant of AS210476 and provide registry context. Evidence basis: source-a7db58ba07f7

Timeline

  1. MooN-NeT public evidence observed

    Changes to AS210476’s registry holder, a first BGP prefix announcement, or a substantive website update would alter how analysts map operational responsibility, reachability, and infrastructure dependencies within the Palestinian Territories. Tracking this dormant entity helps avoid surprise from a new network entrant in a politically sensitive connectivity environment.

At A Glance

  • Name: MooN-NeT
  • Type: Network-related institution
  • Base: Palestinian Territories
  • Profile focus: Institution

What It Does

  • public operating records
  • official service pages
  • source-backed relationship updates

Why It Matters

  • If MooN-NeT begins announcing IP prefixes, it would become an active participant in Palestinian internet connectivity, introducing new routing dependencies and forcing a reassessment of regional network topology and risk. Even a registry reassignment could signal a change of control, affecting resource attribution models and geopolitical mapping of internet assets.
  • Operational criticality: Medium
  • Time horizon: Next quarter

What To Watch

  • official company sources
  • public registries
  • operator-published records
NowMedium priority

Track verified source updates, role changes, and current public evidence.

QuarterMedium policy sensitivity

If MooN-NeT begins announcing IP prefixes, it would become an active participant in Palestinian internet connectivity, introducing new routing dependencies and forcing a reassessment of regional network topology and risk. Even a registry reassignment could signal a change of control, affecting resource attribution models and geopolitical mapping of internet assets.

YearNext quarter outlook

Longer-term relevance depends on verified operating, policy, and relationship changes.

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Public View

If MooN-NeT begins announcing IP prefixes, it would become an active participant in Palestinian internet connectivity, introducing new routing dependencies and forcing a reassessment of regional network topology and risk. Even a registry reassignment could signal a change of control, affecting resource attribution models and geopolitical mapping of internet assets.

Watchpoints

  • MooN-NeT represents a dormant but geopolitically sensitive pre-operational holding.
  • Its activation would signal new network capability in the Palestinian Territories, potentially linked to state or commercial expansion.
  • Tracking it alongside other regional ASNs reduces surprise and supports early dependency mapping.

Caveats

  • Public evidence is used only for source-backed claims.
  • Private control or contract claims require separate public support.

FAQ

Why does BTW track MooN-NeT?

Changes to AS210476’s registry holder, a first BGP prefix announcement, or a substantive website update would alter how analysts map operational responsibility, reachability, and infrastructure dependencies within the Palestinian Territories. Tracking this dormant entity helps avoid surprise from a new network entrant in a politically sensitive connectivity environment.

What evidence supports the profile?

PeeringDB records identify MooN-NeT as the registrant of AS210476 and provide registry context.

What should readers watch next?

MooN-NeT represents a dormant but geopolitically sensitive pre-operational holding.

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