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Rostelecom (AS12389) is directly connected to Level3 (AS3356) and announced the hijacked routes to them but Level3 filtered them out.

But...

AS12389 announced them to Rascom (AS20764), who accepted them and sent them on to Cogent (AS174), who accepted them and propogated them on to Level3 (AS3356), who, unfortunately, then accepted them from Cogent.

The AS path would've been much longer than if Level3 had accepted them directly from AS12389 so, at the least, the actual effects of the hijacking weren't as bad as they could have been.



Problem is they were more specific prefixes for quite a few people and that trumps everything.


Ahhh, I missed that somehow. Looks like it was just a /24 here and there, though, out of much shorter prefixes, at least.




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