Improving Routing Security: Microsoft Joins MANRS

In November, a routing incident in Nigeria caused Internet
traffic to be rerouted through Russia and China
. It lasted for just over an
hour, but during that time, it significantly affected some cloud and search
services globally, including Spotify and Google’s Search. It
was one of more than 10,000 incidents, such as route hijacking and leaks, that
occurred in 2018
. Past
events
have led to large-scale Denial of Service attacks, stolen data, and
financial losses.

The global routing system is the backbone of the Internet. It
determines how everything – from email messages to videoconferences to website
content – moves from network to network. The November event, caused by a
configuration mistake with a small ISP in Nigeria, shows that routing incidents
can have significant global effects – impacting the security of the Internet itself.

A number of network operators around the world – including Oracle,
GÉANT, and Comcast – have joined MANRS to address these types of routing threats.
The Mutually Agreed Norms for Routing Security (MANRS) initiative, supported by
the Internet Society, does this through technical and collaborative action
across the Internet. Those who join agree
to take meaningful action to keep the Internet safe for everyone – by taking four
concrete steps to improve routing resiliency.

We are pleased to announce that Microsoft is one of the latest to join the MANRS initiative – working with other industry giants to improve routing security globally. They join a community of security-minded organizations committed to making the global routing infrastructure – and the Internet itself – more robust and secure.

“Microsoft has long been committed to increasing
cybersecurity online. We are therefore excited to be joining the MANRS
community in addressing the very real challenges related to routing security,
which impact businesses and consumers on a daily basis. In addition to having
implemented the existing MANRS framework in our operations, we are also
partnering with Internet Society, the Cybersecurity Tech Accord, and others to
examine how actors beyond network operators and IXPs can effectively contribute
to routing security,” said Yousef Khalidi, Corporate Vice President, Azure
Networking.

Collaboration and shared responsibility are key to the success of MANRS. So far 152 network operators and 32 IXPs have signed on. By joining, these companies are working hard to secure the fabric of the Internet.

Routing security is vital to the future and stability of the
Internet. We’re thrilled that Microsoft has joined MANRS, and we hope that they
will lead the way for other network operators around the world.

The post Improving Routing Security: Microsoft Joins MANRS appeared first on Internet Society.

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