[ppml] IPv4 Soft Landing - Discussion and Support/Non-SupportRequested
Ted Mittelstaedt
tedm at ipinc.net
Wed Oct 3 16:45:46 EDT 2007
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I am opposed to this policy for the following reasons: 1) No public mechanism is specified for proof of utilization. The requestor is required to prove to ARIN they have efficient utilization. The requestor is not required to publically publish to the world efficient utilization. Under this policy a requestor could make a single SWIP entry for a /23 allocated to Wonklulating Gronkulator corporation, with this corporation not registered in any government entity, not carrying a business license of any kind, no website, and a telephone number that rings the phone in the local public school's janitor's closet. - and that would be perfectly fine. Sure they may be required to demonstrate to ARIN efficient utilization of the /23 - maybe they tell ARIN that Wonkulating is a cover alias for the CIA or some such - but I don't care for this cloak and dagger stuff. The existing SWIP/RWHOIS is adequate to demonstrate efficient utilization and requestors should be required to use this mechanism, and extend it when appropriate. If it cannot be publically proved to most people's satisfaction with entries in SWIP and RWHOIS that a particular block is efficiently utilized - then the requestor hasn't met the requirements, simple as that. 2) No mechanism is specified for continuing proof of 100% utilization. Suppose for example a requestor demonstrates efficient utilization and gets their /16 under these increased requirements. Then 2 years later they go bankrupt and for the next 10 years a bankruptcy court is paying the registration fee for the addresses. The whole point of this proposal is to tighten IPv4 requirements because the author is assuming that the current requirements are loose enough that over the years a lot of "slop" has accumulated in addresseing that is already assigned. In other words it is easier to just request more blocks than vacuum out the corners of your network looking for the usable /25 or so and combining them. I don't know that I agree with this but for the moment lets assume it's a valid supposition. If so, it is then illogical to require requestors to jump through hoops cleaning up their allocations then once more numbers are handed out, they ride off into the sunset and go right back to their slovenly ways. Statements in the policy exist like "demonstrate a one year requirement of 90% utilization" But no mechanism in the policy exists for going back to the requestor a year after they get their /8 and seeing if they actually DID use 90% - and if they didn't, then taking some of that allocation back. Note that I am not opposed to the IDEA of trying to increase the size of the stick and the carrot to convince heavy consumers of IPv4 to "mend their ways" and see the IPv6 light. But this policy is like a roosters mouth - much sound and it has no teeth at all. Give the thing some dentures at least, for crying out loud. Ted -----Original Message----- From: ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:ppml-bounces at arin.net]On Behalf Of Bill Darte Sent: Tuesday, October 02, 2007 2:11 PM To: ppml at arin.net Subject: [ppml] IPv4 Soft Landing - Discussion and Support/Non-SupportRequested Hello, As shepherd of the ARIN Policy Proposal: IPv4 Soft Landing, I would like to ask the community to once again consider this proposal in advance of the Albuquerque Public Policy and Membership Meetings (http://www.arin.net/ARIN-XX/index.html) and voice support or non-support for this proposal with concise reasoning. More information about this proposal and other active proposals can be found at http://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/proposal_archive.html Such an effort will refresh this discussion and perhaps air more recently conceived viewpoints. It will also aid the Advisory Council in their efforts to assess industry consensus about this proposal. Thank you for your interest and involvement in the ARIN Internet Resource Policy Evaluation Process (IRPEP). More information about IRPEP can be found at http://www.arin.net/policy/irpep.html Bill Darte ARIN Advisory Council -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.arin.net/pipermail/ppml/attachments/20071003/ddf23c37/attachment.html
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