Last Call - ARIN Policy Proposal 2001-3

McBurnett, Jim jmcburnett at msmgmt.com
Fri Apr 19 14:41:12 EDT 2002


How does this coincide with policy 2001-2?
Will Multi-homing with IPv6 have a policy similiar to 2001-2?
I do not remember any verbage on that topic. And since ARIN will be doing
/48 in v6 will that mean that Multi-Homed companies will be able to get the
IP's directly from ARIN?

Thanks,
Jim McBurnett



-----Original Message-----
From: Member Services [mailto:memsvcs at arin.net]
Sent: Friday, April 19, 2002 9:59 AM
To: arin-announce at arin.net; ppml at arin.net; v6wg at arin.net
Subject: Last Call - ARIN Policy Proposal 2001-3



The ARIN Advisory Council has voted to forward to the ARIN Board of
Trustees policy proposal 2001-3.

This is a last call for community comment on this policy prior to the 
ARIN Board of Trustees review of the proposed policy. This policy will be 
posted on the ARIN website and the ARIN Public Policy email list.  
Please send your comments to ppml at arin.net. This last call will expire at 
23:59 EST on May 3, 2002. 


Raymond A. Plzak 
President 
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) 

*** Last Call - Policy Proposal 2001-3 *** 

IPv6 Micro-assignments
 
ARIN will make micro-allocations to critical infrastructure providers of
the Internet, including public exchange points, core DNS service
providers (e.g. ICANN-sanctioned root, gTLD, and ccTLD operators) as
well as the RIRs and IANA.  These allocations will be no longer than a
/24 using IPv4 or a /48 using IPv6. Multiple allocations may be granted
in certain situations.

Exchange point allocations MUST be allocated from specific blocks
reserved only for this purpose. All other micro-allocations WILL be
allocated out of other blocks reserved for micro-allocation purposes.
ARIN will make a list of these blocks publicly available.

Exchange point operators must provide justification for the allocation,
including: connection policy, location, other participants (minimum of
two total), ASN, and contact information. ISPs and other organizations
receiving these micro-allocations will be charged under the ISP fee
schedule, while end users will be charged under the fee schedule for end
users. This policy does not preclude exchange point operators from
requesting address space under other policies.	



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