IRT-M21-AU - Abuse-C Role peer relationship

IRT-M21-AU - Abuse-C Role peer relationship appears in publicdata.caida.org (public_source) with a visible Network relationship context. Public relationship material links IRT-M21-AU and Abuse-C Role through a peer network relationship. The profile explains what is visible now and what would change the assessment.

Why It Matters

IRT-M21-AU - Abuse-C Role peer relationship matters because infrastructure decisions depend on knowing which organisations or people appear in the routing, registry, service, or governance map. The profile gives readers a scoped view of identity, visible operating role, and the facts that could change the assessment.

What Sources Show

Available material establishes baseline identity and operating context for IRT-M21-AU - Abuse-C Role peer relationship. Registry, routing, official, or operator-published material can show visibility in the internet ecosystem; ownership, customer, or decision-authority claims still need corroboration.

IRT-M21-AU - Abuse-C Role peer relationship appears in public evidence as a Network relationship within the internet infrastructure ecosystem. No ASN or prefix sample is attached yet; current material establishes identity, registry, or affiliation context. Contact coverage includes 0 operational channels that may help readers understand escalation paths. The public record is useful where it shows registry presence, routing or service footprint, operator-published channels, and official source material.

The article does not infer contracts from those signals. Its value is to identify the organisation's visible operating surface and the future events that would confirm or change relationship claims.

Operating Surface

Public relationship material links IRT-M21-AU and Abuse-C Role through a peer network relationship.

No ASN or prefix sample is attached yet; current material establishes identity, registry, or affiliation context. Contact coverage includes 0 operational channels that may help readers understand escalation paths.

The impact mechanism is the way registry, routing, service, or relationship changes can alter responsibility, reachability, escalation, or dependency assessments. The primary subject is Company; network identifiers and registry records provide context for the primary subject.

Watchpoints

Watch for source freshness changes, footprint expansion or withdrawal, contact churn, and disagreement between registry facts and operator-published material. Add clearer corroboration before making stronger relationship or control claims.

Sources

  • publicdata.caida.org - supports the peer relationship evidence for IRT-M21-AU - Abuse-C Role peer relationship across AS38880 and AS60404.