[ppml] [GLOBAL-V6] How to get a IPv6 /32 the cheap way: go to AFRINIC
michael.dillon at bt.com
michael.dillon at bt.com
Sun Jul 1 07:38:34 EDT 2007
> I've sent it to all the RIR lists as it affects global policy
> decisions: that a single RIR is acting in their own good
> without even having asked their own membership about this situation.
In general, when there are no explicit rules for appealing decisions of
some group, the accepted appeal process is to begin by appealing
directly to the group which made the disputed decision. The next step is
to appeal to whichever body oversees that group. And so on.
In this case, has an appeal been made to the AfriNIC hostmasters who
made the allocation?
Has an appeal already been made to the AfriNIC board of directors?
Has an appeal been made to the AfriNIC membership?
Has an appeal been made to the NRO directly?
If not, then I don't see that this issue is relevant to ARIN or RIPE.
Until the groups listed above have been given the opportunity to deal
with the issue, ARIN and RIPE have no role in this.
In addition, the appeal must be done sequentially, i.e. the person
appealing the issue must allow a reasonable time for the issue to be
considered before escalating the appeal to the next level.
My sense is that none of this was done, and the appeal is being
broadcast everywhere at once in an attempt to sling mud. This is not
acceptable.
And yes, Africa is a special case. It is a very large area in which the
telecommunications structure is very complex, unlike Europe where the
complainant lives. Wars and political disputes as well as hostile
environments mean that all levels of the network from physical upwards,
will have so-called "waste" which does not exist in Europe. That
includes IP addressing. In this case AfriNIC is not conveniently located
in one large well-connected city as in Europe or North America. Instead
it is in 3 widely separated locations where you simply cannot connect by
running three private lines.
--Michael Dillon
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