[arin-ppml] ARIN-prop-136 Services Opt-out Allowed forUnaffiliated Address Blocks
George Bonser
gbonser at seven.com
Fri Feb 25 02:41:28 EST 2011
> From: arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net]
On
> Behalf Of Benson Schliesser
> Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 11:30 PM
> To: John Curran
> Cc: arin-ppml at arin.net List
> Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] ARIN-prop-136 Services Opt-out Allowed
> forUnaffiliated Address Blocks
>
> Hi, John.
>
> On Feb 24, 2011, at 12:51 PM, John Curran wrote:
> > If the intended benefit of ARIN-prop-136 is to actually to
> > propose alternative transfer policies, it would be best to
> > propose the specific changes to the transfer policy section
> > of NRPM.
>
> The intended benefit of ARIN-prop-136 is to accommodate organizations
> that do not consent to be regulated by ARIN policy.
>
> Secondary benefits may accrue to organizations that opt-out,
presumably
> motivating them to do so. There may be any number of benefits,
> including alternative approaches to transfers.
Actually, it might hasten the demise of IPv4 so it might not be a bad
thing in the broad view. It would result in more networks being
blocked, more segments being hijacked, all sorts of nefarious hijinks.
This would probably speed up people shutting access to more v4 space.
Go for it.
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