BattleHost is tracked because changes to AS210356's BGP announcements, prefix set, or peering relationships can affect routing for internet services that depend on its network. Public registry and routing records allow analysts to monitor ownership context and dependency changes over time.
AuteurLydia Luo
Editorial owner accountable for this profile route.
Temps de lecture3 min
Estimated reading time at standard editorial pace.
Publié leJun 02, 2026
Date this profile last entered editorial circulation.
Last updateJun 02, 2026
Date this profile last entered editorial circulation.
CategoryNetwork-related institution
Controlled classification used for cross-profile comparison.
RégionEurope / United Kingdom
Primary geography where current signals are most visible.
Signal FocusInstitution Type
Principal area tracked in this intelligence profile.
Type de contenuProfile
Structured profile used for cross-category comparison.
Domaine principalInfrastructure
Primary editorial domain framing the analysis.
SujetNetwork-related institution
Controlled taxonomy label used for this profile route.
HorizonQuarter (30-120d)
Most likely window for material strategy effects.
ImpactMediumThe signal alters planning assumptions but usually requires secondary implementation before full effect.
Confiance0.95
Anchored to multiple primary-source references and direct disclosures.
Dossier de preuves
Sources primaires utilisées pour la classification et l'évaluation d'impact.
BattleHost is an autonomous system (AS210356) registered in RIPE NCC with a United Kingdom country code, visible in global BGP routing. Its public identity is limited to registry and routing records; no corporate entity, website, or personnel are documented. The assessment focuses on routing dependency signals: changes to its BGP announcements or peering can affect reachability for dependent services. Watchpoints include registry record changes, prefix activity, and appearance of an official website or legal entity documentation. Key gaps are ownership, jurisdiction, and human control surface.
Core Entity Brief
Core Entity Brief
Entity
BattleHost
Public role
BattleHost is tracked because changes to AS210356's BGP announcements, prefix set, or peering relationships can affect routing for internet services that depend on its network. Public registry and routing records allow analysts to monitor ownership context and dependency changes over time.
Region
Europe / United Kingdom
Category
Network-related institution
Primary domain
Infrastructure
Signal focus
Institution Type
Time horizon
Quarter (30-120d)
Impact
Medium
Confidence
0.95
Evidence coverage
4 public source references
Related coverage
Profile anchor article
Website
Public evidence pending
Last update
Jun 02, 2026
BattleHost appears in external numbering or routing evidence for AS210356; the public assessment is bounded by that source-backed context.
What It Does
Visible operating role: BattleHost operates as an autonomous system in the global internet routing system, advertising IP prefixes and maintaining BGP peering and transit relationships, as observed through public routing analytics.
Revenue and customer gap: No supplied evidence establishes a revenue model, customer base, or contract position; those claims need official, financial, or service-source support before publication.
Operating Snapshot
Identity baseline: BattleHost is the name registered in RIPE NCC for autonomous system AS210356, visible in global BGP routing tables with a United Kingdom country code.
Routing context: No active prefix sample is present in the current evidence set, so the public assessment is limited to ASN identity until routing evidence changes.
Control Surface
Numbering records: The control surface consists of the AS210356 registration in RIPE NCC, its BGP announcements, and its peering arrangements with upstream providers and internet exchanges, which can be monitored via RDAP, RIPEstat, BGPView, and PeeringDB.
Evidence changes: New announcements, withdrawals, or reassigned prefixes attached to AS210356 can change how much operational significance readers should assign to BattleHost.
Watchpoints
Record freshness: Stale, conflicting, or changed public records are the main uncertainty when translating source evidence into an operating profile.
Footprint change: New ASN, prefix, official website, PeeringDB, or registry evidence would raise or lower BattleHost's infrastructure relevance.
Domain of operation
BattleHost is tracked because changes to AS210356's BGP announcements, prefix set, or peering relationships can affect routing for internet services that depend on its network. Public registry and routing records allow analysts to monitor ownership context and dependency changes over time.
Public role: BattleHost is framed by battlehost is tracked because changes to as210356's bgp announcements, prefix set, or peering relationships can affect routing for internet services that depend on its network. public registry and routing records allow analysts to monitor ownership context and dependency changes over time. and public infrastructure context. Evidence basis: Registry RDAP / WHOIS record; RIPE registry record
Operating surface: Network-related institution and Europe / United Kingdom provide the public context for this institution profile. Evidence basis: Registry RDAP / WHOIS record; RIPE registry record
Timeline
BattleHost public profile updated
Public coverage records BattleHost as a subject for role, operating context, and evidence review.
Signal Map
Signal Map
Why tracked: BattleHost is tracked because changes to AS210356's BGP announcements, prefix set, or peering relationships can affect routing for internet services that depend on its network. Public registry and routing records allow analysts to monitor ownership context and dependency changes over time.
Object role: BattleHost operates as an autonomous system in the global internet routing system, advertising IP prefixes and maintaining BGP peering and transit relationships, as observed through public routing analytics.
Impact note: Any operational change to AS210356's routing posture can alter reachability for traffic that transits it. Monitoring public signals helps analysts assess infrastructure dependency risks without private network data.
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 BattleHost 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 BattleHost included?
BattleHost 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.