[ppml] fee clarification was: PPML Digest, Vol 22, Issue 9
Ray Plzak
plzak at arin.net
Thu Apr 5 10:25:53 EDT 2007
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I agree that a discussion of whether to use fees as a policy tool is appropriate, however in the end, the board after consultation with the members of ARIN will decide whether or not to use such a tool. Ray > -----Original Message----- > From: ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:ppml-bounces at arin.net] On Behalf Of > Howard, W. Lee > Sent: Thursday, April 05, 2007 10:01 AM > To: ppml at arin.net > Subject: Re: [ppml] fee clarification was: PPML Digest, Vol 22, Issue 9 > > When the subject of money comes up, I want to be as clear as > possible. Discussions of fees really belong on the members > mailing list, arin-discuss, but I personally think the debate > of whether fees should be a tool in policy is appropriate > here. > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:ppml-bounces at arin.net] On > > Behalf Of Ted Mittelstaedt > > Sent: Wednesday, April 04, 2007 8:58 PM > > To: mahler at louisiana.edu; ppml at arin.net > > Subject: Re: [ppml] PPML Digest, Vol 22, Issue 9 > > > > Consider ARIN's fee schedule. Above a /14 is $18,000.00 USD > > a year. Why would a legacy /8 holder who is currently paying > > ARIN not a cent, because they have not signed an RSA, want to > > sign an RSA to get auto-allocated IPv6 for free so they can > > start paying $18,000 a year for their /8 and be subject to > > utilization requirements as well? > > http://www.arin.net/billing/fee_schedule.html > > Renewal fees are equal to initial registration fees only > for allocations (i.e., to ISPs). Maintenance fees for > assignments (i.e., to end-users) are $100 per year. This is > true both in IPv4 and IPv6 (ignoring the waiver). > > > A legacy holder of a /8 IPv4 that wants IPv6 would be better > > off simply registering IPv6 by itself and paying much less > > money. In fact, that is one of the loopholes I would like to > > see closed in ARIN's policy. > > > > A pre-RIR /8 holder who didn't sign an RSA for the /8 could I > > believe go to ARIN and pay the yearly membership fee of $500 > > and then the minimum $500 under the fee wavier and get all > > the IPv6 they wanted. Of course they would be subject to an > > RSA for the IPv6 but according to the published policies I > > think they would only be required to demonstrate 80% > > utilization on their existing /8. In that case it would be > > $17,000 cheaper per year for them to NOT participate in an > > IPv6 auto-allocation program. > > This loophole was intentional. Members pay either the annual > allocation renewal on their IPv4 allocation, or a $500 annual > renewal fee. As a member, you not only get this waiver, you > also get to vote for Board and Advisory Council members, you > get 2 free seats at the public policy and members meeting > (transportation, room and board are still up to you), and you > get to discuss fees and finances on arin-discuss. > > > > >Make this the last time you have to worry about your > > existing address > > >space between now and your retirement. Make the advantage > > of switching > > >to IPV6 that you have room to operate and test for years to > > come. Make > > >it a reason to work thru the headaches of using IPV6. > > It's debatable whether we're there yet. Since ARINs default > assignment size is /48, and default allocation size is /32, > there's a lot of space for most people to work with. > > Is that enough to last until retirement? Depends on how much > your network grows (and maybe how close you are to retirement). > > > > > I think an auto-allocation scheme would work for IPv4 holders > > who are paying ARIN now. What I would like to see is the > > separate fee schedules for IPv4 and IPv6 to disappear and > > there to be only a single fee schedule and both IPv4 and an > > equivalent amount of IPv6 be allocated on each request - in > > other words, an IPv4 holder would no longer pay 1 fee for > > IPv4 and 1 fee for IPv6, then would pay a single fee for > > "Amount of IP addressing" they are using. > > If you compare the IPv4 and IPv6 Initial Allocation and Annual > Renewal Fees tables in the fee schedule, you'll see that there > is a correlation. Since IPv6 initial allocation fees and > IPv6 renewal fees are waived for members in good standing > (whether subscriber or non-subscriber members), we're not far > from this point now. > > I should mention that fee waivers are set to expire at the > end of this calendar year. > > Lee > > > Ted > _______________________________________________ > This message sent to you through the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List > (PPML at arin.net). > Manage your mailing list subscription at: > http://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/ppml
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