Tracking Nodescrape gives early visibility into connectivity disruptions for its hosted customer base. Changes in AS212057’s upstreams, prefix announcements, or peering status can directly affect whether its game servers and KVM instances remain reachable. Additionally, one of its IPs operates as a Tor exit node, creating a reputation risk that could cause wider prefix blocklisting.
AutorAlan Tan
Editorial owner accountable for this profile route.
Tiempo de lectura3 min
Estimated reading time at standard editorial pace.
PublicadoMay 26, 2026
Date this profile last entered editorial circulation.
Last updateJun 02, 2026
Date this profile last entered editorial circulation.
CategoryDigital infrastructure institution
Controlled classification used for cross-profile comparison.
RegiónEurope, Germany
Primary geography where current signals are most visible.
Signal FocusInstitution Type
Principal area tracked in this intelligence profile.
Tipo de contenidoProfile
Structured profile used for cross-category comparison.
Dominio principalInfrastructure
Primary editorial domain framing the analysis.
TemaInternet infrastructure
Controlled taxonomy label used for this profile route.
Horizonte temporalQuarter (30-120d)
Most likely window for material strategy effects.
ImpactoMediumThe signal alters planning assumptions but usually requires secondary implementation before full effect.
Confianza0.95
Anchored to multiple primary-source references and direct disclosures.
Paquete de evidencia
Fuentes primarias utilizadas para la clasificación y la puntuación de impacto.
Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape operates a small hosting business in Germany, visible through AS212057 and an advertised gaming/KVM storefront. The evidence confirms its registry identity and routing footprints but does not verify commercial scale, revenue, or Pascal Stattmann's personal authority. Watchpoints include routing changes, upstream shifts, and abuse signals. Uncertainty surrounds customer numbers and decision-making roles. This profile relies solely on public registry, PeeringDB, BGP tools, and website data.
Core Entity Brief
Core Entity Brief
Entity
Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape
Public role
Tracking Nodescrape gives early visibility into connectivity disruptions for its hosted customer base. Changes in AS212057’s upstreams, prefix announcements, or peering status can directly affect whether its game servers and KVM instances remain reachable. Additionally, one of its IPs operates as a Tor exit node, creating a reputation risk that could cause wider prefix blocklisting.
Region
Europe, Germany
Category
Digital infrastructure institution
Primary domain
Infrastructure
Signal focus
Institution Type
Time horizon
Quarter (30-120d)
Impact
Medium
Confidence
0.95
Evidence coverage
12 public source references
Related coverage
Profile anchor article
Website
Public evidence pending
Last update
Jun 02, 2026
Nodescrape is a small hosting business in Germany that sells game servers and KVM virtual machines, operating its own IP space and autonomous system.
What It Does
Hosting sales: Offers premium game hosting and KVM servers through a web shop with account registration and checkout flows at nodescrape.net.
Network operation: Maintains autonomous system AS212057 with public routing, upstream transit from Cogent and RETN, and open peering at GNM‑IX.
Revenue unknown: No public financial data or customer counts are available; the business scale is self‑reported and unverified.
Operating Snapshot
Legal name: Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape
Routing: Announces IPv4 prefixes 5.230.5.0/24, 77.90.46.0/24 and IPv6 prefixes 2a0c:9a40:8860::/44, 2a10:ccc0:8860::/44; upstreams Cogent and RETN
Peering: Open peering policy at GNM‑IX; looking glass at https://lg‑vie‑at.nodescra.pe
Reputation risk: One IP (85.93.31.31, hostname exit1.nodescrape.net) is listed as a Tor exit node on AbuseIPDB, though the provider is not responsible for Tor user actions.
Control Surface
Routing and registry: AS212057 aut‑num object, AS‑set AS212057:AS‑NODESCRAPE, RIPE organisation and maintainer objects, and PeeringDB network profile define how the network appears to peers and transit.
Public website: The nodescrape.net storefront controls customer acquisition, service descriptions, and account management.
Monitoring endpoints: The looking glass and public route servers provide real-time visibility into AS212057 routing decisions.
Watchpoints
Routing changes: Shifts in upstreams, peering, or prefix announcements can directly impact service reachability.
Abuse listings: Because one IP is a Tor exit, blocklist entries may cover the entire assigned prefix range and harm clean services.
Registry updates: Modifications to the RIPE objects or PeeringDB profile can change peering policy or contact points.
Domain of operation
Tracking Nodescrape gives early visibility into connectivity disruptions for its hosted customer base. Changes in AS212057’s upstreams, prefix announcements, or peering status can directly affect whether its game servers and KVM instances remain reachable. Additionally, one of its IPs operates as a Tor exit node, creating a reputation risk that could cause wider prefix blocklisting.
Public role: Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape is framed by tracking nodescrape gives early visibility into connectivity disruptions for its hosted customer base. changes in as212057’s upstreams, prefix announcements, or peering status can directly affect whether its game servers and kvm instances remain reachable. additionally, one of its ips operates as a tor exit node, creating a reputation risk that could cause wider prefix blocklisting. and public infrastructure context. Evidence basis: Registry RDAP / WHOIS record; PeeringDB network profile
Operating surface: Internet infrastructure and Europe, Germany provide the public context for this institution profile. Evidence basis: Registry RDAP / WHOIS record; PeeringDB network profile
Timeline
Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape public profile updated
Public coverage records Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape as a subject for role, operating context, and evidence review.
Signal Map
Signal Map
Why tracked: Tracking Nodescrape gives early visibility into connectivity disruptions for its hosted customer base. Changes in AS212057’s upstreams, prefix announcements, or peering status can directly affect whether its game servers and KVM instances remain reachable. Additionally, one of its IPs operates as a Tor exit node, creating a reputation risk that could cause wider prefix blocklisting.
Object role: The institution operates publicly as Nodescrape, advertising premium game hosting and KVM servers via nodescrape.net. It maintains RIPE-visible autonomous system AS212057, announces IPv4 and IPv6 prefixes, peers openly at GNM-IX, and provides a looking glass. Its role is that of a small-scale internet service provider with self-managed routing.
Impact note: If AS212057 experiences an upstream failure, routing misconfiguration, or suffers blocklisting because of the Tor exit reputation, all Nodescrape-hosted services would become unreachable. This would cascade to any customers relying on those services for gaming or virtualised computing, making the operator's connectivity a single point of failure for its user base.
Control surface: public operating records, official service pages, source-backed relationship updates
Key dependencies: official company sources, public registries, operator-published records
Public View
The public read of Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape is limited to visible role, operating context, and relationship evidence.
Watchpoints
New public role, affiliation, product, policy, or market disclosures.
Verified relationship changes involving named organizations or people.
Caveats
Private or unverified claims are excluded from this public view.
FAQ
Why is Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape included?
Pascal Stattmann trading as Nodescrape has public evidence that makes the institution relevant to BTW's coverage of digital infrastructure, governance, or markets.
What is public about this profile?
The public layer covers visible role, operating context, linked organizations, and evidence-backed watchpoints.
What should readers watch next?
Readers should watch for source-backed role changes, new partnerships, regulatory exposure, operating expansion, or evidence that changes the public assessment.