[ppml] Policy Proposal 2006-7 - To Be Revised
Member Services
info at arin.net
Wed Apr 25 16:01:18 EDT 2007
Policy Proposal 2006-7
Changes to IPv6 initial allocation criteria
The ARIN Advisory Council (AC), acting under the provisions of the ARIN
Internet Resource Policy Evaluation Process (IRPEP), determined
that while there is not community consensus in favor of the proposal
there is consensus that the proposal should be revised and discussed
further. The AC made this determination at their meeting at the
conclusion of the ARIN Public Policy meeting on 24 April 2007. The Chair
of the AC reported the results of the AC meeting during the Members
Meeting. The AC Chair's report can be found at:
http://www.arin.net/meetings/minutes/ARIN_XIX/mem.html
The AC will work with the author of the proposal to make the community
suggested revisions and return the proposal to the PPML for further
discussion.
The policy proposal text is provided below and is also available at:
http://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2006_7.html
The ARIN Internet Resource Policy Evaluation Process can be found at:
http://www.arin.net/policy/irpep.html
Regards,
Member Services
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
##*##
Policy Proposal 2006-7
Changes to IPv6 initial allocation criteria
Proposal type: Insert a new additional line item e. to 6.5.1.1 of NRPM
Policy term: permanent
Policy statement:
New organizations need a policy that allows them to apply for IPv6
address space. To provide this we need to insert a new additional line
item to 6.5.1.1. The new line item would be line 'e' as follows:
e. OR be an organization new to providing internet services, and can
justify intent to announce the requested IPv6 address space within one
year, through records such as contracts, inventory and/or other
applicable documentation.
Rationale:
- New organizations who do not want to use IPv4 at all and start off
using IPv6 addresses only, need a policy that gives them permission to
do so. This is also valid for existing companies that may or may not
have assigned IPv4 addresses and now want to start offering IPv6
services. These organizations may also wish to request IPv4 at the same
time.
- One year is given as the sufficient time frame to actually implement
usage of the IPv6 address space and reveal if the 'said organization' is
truly using the IPv6 space granted.
-Every means of documentation that can reveal 'true intent of use' is
not listed as this can be a very long list and should be left to the
discretion of the RIR staff.
-An ISP or LIR may decide to assign a different prefix size than /48.
For example, a cellular operator may use /64.
-ASN is not required because as long as they are statically routed to an
upstream and don't want to run bgp/announce directly to the Internet,
they don't need an ASN, therefore we shouldn't create policy that would
contribute to ASN bloat.
- Organization in this is defined as a Corporation, ISP, LLC et al.
In SUMMARY if this policy is implemented the change to the NRPM would
read as follows:
6.5.1.1 Initial allocation criteria
To qualify for an initial allocation of IPV6 address space, an
organization must:
a be a LIR;
b. not be an end site;
c. plan to provide IPV6 connectivity to which it will assign IPV6
address space, by advertising that connectivity through its single
aggregated address allocation;
d. be an existing, known ISP in the ARIN region or have a plan for
making at least 200/48 assignments to other organizations within five years.
e. OR be an organization new to providing internet services, and can
justify intent to announce the requested IPV6 address space within one
year, through records such as contracts, inventory and/or other
applicable documentation.
Timetable for implementation: Immediate
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