The IEEE registrant for these blocks is "INGRAM MICRO SERVICES," registered at 100 Chemin de Baillot, Montauban, France 82000 — the address of the Ingram Micro Lifecycle facility, the group's repair, refurbishment, and recommerce (ITAD) operation, not the U.S. parent Ingram Micro Inc. Twelve MA-L blocks are assigned to this entity (about 201 million addresses): 08:87:C6, 10:E9:92, 18:86:37, 18:DF:26, 38:B5:C9, 44:A6:1E, 50:39:2F, 68:3F:7D, 7C:C1:77, AC:CF:7B, C8:7F:2B, and F4:F9:1E. Ingram Micro is one of the world's largest technology distributors and supply-chain-services companies rather than a conventional device manufacturer, and no public IEEE or vendor documentation states what device types consume these blocks. The Montauban Lifecycle site handles smartphones, laptops, servers, and networking hardware, and the group also runs the V7 private-label peripheral brand, so the most plausible — but unconfirmed — uses are refurbished, remarketed, or rebranded hardware processed through that operation. For triage, an Ingram Micro Services OUI maps to this French registrant entity and most likely indicates a refurbished or rebranded device rather than a freshly manufactured product line; the parent firm's 2025 corporate ransomware incident (a GlobalProtect VPN breach) was an IT-systems event and carries no MAC- or OUI-layer security implication, so the prefix warrants no elevated risk flag on its own.
- IEEE assignment
- 12 prefixes → "INGRAM MICRO SERVICES", registered Montauban, FR [Confirmed] — IEEE MA-L (oui.csv)
- Registry / block size
- MA-L; 12 blocks (~201M addresses) [Confirmed] — IEEE MA-L (oui.csv); also maclookup.app (IEEE-sourced)
- HQ / country
- 100 Chemin de Baillot, Montauban 82000, France (registry address; the Ingram Micro Lifecycle facility) [Confirmed] — IEEE MA-L (oui.csv), ingrammicrolifecycle.com/company/locations/france-montauban
- Company status
- active; Ingram Micro is a major global IT distributor and supply-chain-services firm; "Ingram Micro Services" is the registrant subsidiary/division [Confirmed] — ingrammicro.com, maclookup.app/vendors/ingram-micro-services
- Entity type
- technology distributor / supply-chain services; the registrant address is the Ingram Micro Lifecycle (refurbishment / ITAD) site in France [Confirmed] — ingrammicrolifecycle.com, maclookup.app
- Device types
- Unknown — no public IEEE or vendor documentation specifies what device types use these blocks. Plausible (unconfirmed) uses are refurbished/remarketed smartphones, laptops, servers, or networking hardware processed through the Montauban Lifecycle site, or V7 private-label peripherals [Unknown] — maclookup.app, ingrammicrolifecycle.com/company/locations/france-montauban, na.ingrammicro.com/en-us/vendors/v7
- Notable products
- V7 private-label peripherals (related brand; no confirmed NIC/wireless-adapter product line tied to these OUIs)
- Verified prefix sample
- 10:E9:92, 44:A6:1E, 7C:C1:77, F4:F9:1E (full 12-block set in JSON) [Confirmed] — IEEE MA-L (oui.csv), maclookup.app/vendors/ingram-micro-services
- MA-M / MA-S
- none — no MA-M assignments in mam.csv and no MA-S (OUI-36) assignments in oui36.csv for this entity [Confirmed] — IEEE mam.csv, IEEE oui36.csv
- Security note
- no threat intelligence links these prefixes to spoofing, reconnaissance, or malicious activity. The Ingram Micro 2025 ransomware incident (a Palo Alto GlobalProtect VPN breach at the parent company) was a corporate-IT event unrelated to MAC/OUI-layer risk; no elevated risk flag is warranted from OUI ownership alone [Likely] — darkreading.com, sec.gov (8-K), maclookup.app
- Special note
- registrant is "INGRAM MICRO SERVICES," the French Lifecycle subsidiary — not "Ingram Micro Inc." The IEEE registry publishes no assignment dates; third-party "date registered" values (e.g. maclookup.app) are database artifacts, so none is stated here [Confirmed]
- Related vendors
- Ingram Micro Inc. (parent); V7 (group private-label peripheral brand)
- Analyst note
- An Ingram Micro Services OUI maps to this French registrant entity; given the Lifecycle/ITAD context it most likely indicates a refurbished or rebranded device rather than a current OEM product line, though the specific device type cannot be confirmed from public sources.