[ppml] [arin-discuss] /29 limit for ARIN SWIP whois
michael.dillon at bt.com
michael.dillon at bt.com
Wed Jan 9 18:14:12 EST 2008
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> If I has the home address for Osama Bin Laden, I assure you > that the US military would make things "all better" Not really. The US military had the home address of Saddam Hussein and proceeded to bomb the crap out of them, killing some of his associates in the process. But they didn't get Saddam. There are no guarantees that Osama will be home when the US Military comes calling, and more importantly, Osama is a powerless irrelevant figure who no longer has any substantial command and control over the people who perpetrate terrorist attacks in his name. Not to mention the martyr effect which is likely 180 degrees from what you really want. I'll bet that 50 years from now, secret CIA archives will be opened and we discover that they have known where Osama was years ago, and have conciously followed a program of chasing him so that he can't settle down, without any intent to actually attack him and cause hime any personal harm. So can we drop the knee-jerk thinking and the platitudes and get serious about what belongs in an ARIN policy and what doesn't? As you have pointed out, any ISP that doesn't want to handle abuse desk calls is free to publish a list of their customers with phone number and email address, any time they want. They could use RWHOIS, they could use the web. The question is, what is the SCOPE OF ARIN's RESPONSIBILITY in this area. --Michael Dillon
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