Finding useful/pertinent IP reallocation WHOIS info

Can anyone provide a better way to find, say, the appropriate
contact information for address blocks that are further rellocated
from the regional registries? I've about reached my frustration
levels over the course of the past year on the issue.

Example: Trying to find the approriate contact info for an
abuse@ address responsible for a malicious host that (may)
reside within an address block in Brazil (not meaning to pick
on Brazil by no means). Checking the WHOIS database at:

http://lacnic.net/cgi-bin/lacnic/whois?lg=EN

...you can find that:

#These addresses have been further assigned to Brazilian users.
#Contact information can be found at the WHOIS server located
#at whois.registro.br and at http://whois.nic.br

No, it can't. At least not that I can ascertain.

And when arriving at either of these web pages, the only
lookup available to the user is a CGI form for domain-only
registry lookups, not for IP address allocation info.

I was also hoping that the Referral WHOIS (RWhois) database
might provide some assiatance, I am informed only that the
responsible registry is the Latin American and Caribbean IP
address Regional Registry.

I have tried many times to solicit a response via e-mail
from someone at the Brazilian registry to no avail.

Very frustrating.

The system is broken and needs to be fixed. Registries: Are you
listening?

- ferg

LACNIC Query

...you can find that:

#These addresses have been further assigned to Brazilian users.
#Contact information can be found at the WHOIS server located
#at whois.registro.br and at http://whois.nic.br

Well, if you could speak Portuguese you would immediately
see that they shuffled the website and the page you want
is at Whois - Registro.br
And if you don't speak Portuguese, how are you going
to communicate with a small Brazilian ISP in the first
place?

Also, you have identified an error at LACNIC and
you probably should tell them so that they can
correct their whois server. LACNIC does have English
language capability.

--Michael Dillon

P.S. The whole concept of looking up an abuse contact
in a whois database is completely broken and needs
to be scrapped. It simply does not scale. We need
some hierarchy here as in many other areas of the
network.