Upcoming keynotes and program highlights at APRICOT 2026
Gain new operational skills and insights, meet like-minded peers, and help shape the Internet at APRICOT 2026. Here’s some of what you can look forward to.
Gain new operational skills and insights, meet like-minded peers, and help shape the Internet at APRICOT 2026. Here’s some of what you can look forward to.
Mapping Internet number resources from IP addresses to organizations is straightforward using whois or RDAP, but listing all resources held by a given organization is far more challenging. This post explores a simpler, data-driven approach using RIR extended statistics and reg-id identifiers.
At bdNOG 20, Bangladesh’s Internet community came together to share practical experience, address operational challenges, and strengthen local capacity for a more secure, IPv6-ready Internet.
How the Asia Pacific Internet community strengthened infrastructure, skills, and collaboration in the second half of 2025.
MyAPNIC now supports RPKI Signed Checklists (RSCs), providing Members with a new way to cryptographically sign and verify documents using their RPKI resources. Your feedback is welcome.
Two groups of students from NITK discuss the work they did at the IETF 122 Bangkok hackathon, and afterwards in their WG. Professor Mohit Taliani is seeking to encourage new entrants to join IETF protocol and standards development.
APNIC Members are invited to attend the AGM at APNIC 61, held as part of APRICOT 2026, in Jakarta, Indonesia, on Thursday, 12 February 2026.
A change in consensus gauging tooling, and two policy proposals are up for discussion.
What IPv4 and IPv6 addressing in 2025 tells us about the changing nature of the network.
Guest Post: New collectors and tools, improved data access, and ongoing behind-the-scenes work to make the platform more stable, sustainable, and useful.