[ppml] Proposed Policy: IPv4 Countdown
Howard, W. Lee
Lee.Howard at stanleyassociates.com
Sat Mar 17 10:32:34 EDT 2007
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> Well, the lawsuit your referring to - Kremen VS Arin, available > here: www.internetgovernance.org/pdf/kremen.pdf has enough > huge flaws o drive a truck through. http://www.arin.net/media/releases/dismissal-release.pdf The Court recognized ARIN's authority in the stewardship of IP numbering resources, and found that everyone should play by the same rules. > >I would support a policy proposal that directed ARIN to > actively try to > >reclaim address space that was no longer in use, regardless of what > >terms it was assigned/allocated under. > > Well, good because that is what I am in favor of as well. Excellent. Will one of you please write such a proposal? > > you need to come up with > >better studies and data than we already have. > > I don't see how anyone including myself can come up with any > studies worth a damn that will predict how reclamation turns > out. Nobody really knows how much of the allocated address > space out there is really being used according to the > justifications submitted when it was allocated (years earlier > in many cases) True, nobody really knows. It is possible to ask contacts at a variety of organizations (public policy meetings are one great venue, but IETF is another good one) how much allocated-but-unused space they have. You can get a rough order of magnitude. > You have to simply make a decision, are we going to try > reclamation or not? It's not deciding time until there's a proposal. This is discussion time. > If we are, then the next decision is are we going to try > reclamation based on monetary adjustments, (changing fees) or > by setting policy? Minor note: policies are set by the public, fees are set by the members. > I do not favor setting fees as a tool for changing IPv4 > allocations. I am much more in favor of setting policy then > if people violate the policy, suing the pants off of them. > This does have a requirement that the organization be run by > someone with balls. Unfortunately, I am in a minority > because most people subscribe to the belief that all we have > to do is adjust pricing and people will do what we want - > like magic! As a result if a reclamation policy does get > passed, it most likely will be a limp-handed politically > correct poofball that will make all kinds of naieve > assumptions that organizations will fall all over themselves > to return unused space just because they think it might cost > a bit more money to hold on to it. This paragraph might contain some content, but it's hard to tell. I think it says: You would support a (as yet unsubmitted) policy of aggressive auditing and reclamation of IPv4 address space, enforced by legal action. You suspect, however, that the majority of the public would not support such a policy. Please correct me if I misunderstand your position. Lee
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