APNIC is the Regional Internet Registry administering IP addresses for the Asia Pacific
APNIC is the Regional Internet Registry administering IP addresses for the Asia Pacific
Rising CVEs in the AI epoch
By Adli Wahid
Vulnerability disclosures are rising sharply, but that does not mean risk is increasing. As AI-driven discovery floods defenders with more data but not more threats, success now depends on identifying what matters and acting faster.
Strengthening APNIC’s security foundations
By Jason Reid
APNIC is strengthening the security of its core systems through infrastructure modernization, enhanced application testing, and improved data practices.
Homepage highlight
Register now for APNIC 62!
Take part in hands-on workshops, and get insights from experts and leaders on Internet operations. Register now and shape the future of the Internet!
Notes from NANOG 97
By Geoff Huston
AI eats the world, geolocation, measuring IPv6, and the cost of SSH from NANOG 97.
Malaysia Proposes Legislative Change to Address Management
By Tony Smith
Comments close on the proposed amendments on 10 July 2026.
Peering capacity at public Internet Exchanges: What the data reveals
By Gael Hernandez
Guest Post: This study delivers data-rich insights into the decisions made by the most IXP-connected CDN, cloud and content networks, analysing their strategies both individually and collectively as a group that exerts significant influence on the global interconnection landscape.
From process to outcomes: Lessons from policy at APNIC 61
By Christopher Hawker
Guest Post: The role of community input, operational realities, and clear problem definition in shaping Internet number resource policy.
[Podcast] What ‘name-based routing’ really means
By George Michaelson
Internet routing is shifting from IP-based forwarding to name-based decisions, with DNS and intermediaries steering requests. How does this work in practice, and who decides where your request is served from?
Hunting stuck routes with the BGP Clock and the BGP Stuck Route Observatory
By Kemal Sanjta
Guest Post: BGP stuck routes remain an important problem for network operators. To help bridge this visibility gap, Cisco ThousandEyes introduced a methodology for measuring the prevalence of stuck routes: The BGP Clock.