[arin-ppml] Policy Proposal: Protective UsageTransferPolicyforIPv4 Address
Ted Mittelstaedt
tedm at ipinc.net
Wed Feb 11 13:20:51 EST 2009
Which provider?
Unless your going to name names, I'm not even going to consider looking at
this.
The entire thing smacks of trying to shove something through to benefit a
single special interest, with zero explanations as to why it's being done.
If these IX's had contacted each other and contacted this alleged provider
and attempted to work something out, and been rebuffed, and then contacted
ARIN and ARIN attempted to mediate something, and once more was
rebuffed, THEN I would be willing to support something like this. But so
far
no evidence has been presented that anyone tried diplomacy first, before
hauling out the munitions and attempting to shoot people with the big guns.
Since there has been no cease and desist order issued, and as you say the
IX's
know they are eligible to request direct allocations, then in my opinion if
the IX's
are worried about some future cease and desist order that may or may not
happen,
and they are unwilling to try talking first, and unwilling to explain to the
community here who the players are and get this problem out in the open,
then SCREW THEM.
They should immediately request their micro allocations and when they get
them,
commence renumbering.
Ted
_____
From: arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net] On
Behalf Of Chris Malayter
Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 10:26 PM
To: arin-ppml at arin.net
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Policy Proposal: Protective
UsageTransferPolicyforIPv4 Address
Hello all,
In an effort to add some clarification behind the policy proposal that was
submitted I will add the following.
There are a large number of IX's in the North American region (as well as
other regions) that have address space allocated from a provider that
specializes in exchange allocations.
According to the current ARIN policy, we are all eligible to request space
as a direct allocation from ARIN. That is not lost on the IX's and they do
completely understand that they are eligible for a direct allocation.
The real issue is that if the current provider was to serve a majority of
the US IX's with a cease and desist order from using the space at the term
of all of the existing contracts at the end of 2009 that would force a
massive renumber of most every IX in the North American region, save one
major IX.
The reason behind the policy proposal was to provide a method to allow IX's
1) protection from having to renumber all of the IX's, or 2) to at least
let the IX's have enough time, before they are forced out of the space, to
have a smooth transition.
Moreover, if this happens to other "c(C)ritical i(I)nfrastructure"
corporations that happen to be in unique situations like the IX's there
would be a policy in place to offer some margin of time or protection to the
affected parties.
Speaking for myself not any company or agent.
-Chris
_____
From: arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net] On
Behalf Of Martin Hannigan
Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2009 9:26 PM
To: arin-ppml at arin.net
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Policy Proposal: Protective Usage
TransferPolicyforIPv4 Address
On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 3:33 PM, Leo Bicknell <bicknell at ufp.org> wrote:
In a message written on Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 02:21:51PM -0500, Martin
Hannigan wrote:
> Why do they have two years? These sales are taking place now, and
> unexpectedly.
I made the assumption that we were talking about transfer policy
style transactions, which ARIN hasn't approved yet; and further
that we were talking about above board transactions. It seemed
likely to me that above board transactions of that sort won't be
approved until close to the free pool exhaustion.
If someone is doing something below board there are better ways to
address that than policy changes.
I mostly agree with you, Leo, except that this stuff isn't happening below
board. The existing policies are being followed. This is a symptom of our
failure to reach consensus on a transfer policy that reflects the reality of
the twenty first century Internet, not of a systemic corruptness.
Getting back to the policy; I support the intent, but I think that the
author should clarify what they want us to do a little better. Maybe ask us
to establish a process that a resource holder, an impacted indirect party,
can challenge the legitimacy of "any" transfer instead of appeal it after
the fact (TINA)? Maybe even suggest that all transfers are required to be
publicly announced on the website for a minimum of 60 days prior to
execution so that any affected parties are guaranteed at least some notice.
Interesting transparency, to say the least.
Best,
-M<
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