[arin-ppml] Serious question for the list.

Martin Hannigan hannigan at gmail.com
Thu May 5 17:58:17 EDT 2011


On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 1:45 PM, David Farmer <farmer at umn.edu> wrote:
> On 5/5/11 12:25 CDT, Martin Hannigan wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 1:17 PM, David Farmer<farmer at umn.edu>  wrote:
>>>
>>> On 5/5/11 11:49 CDT, Mike Burns wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi all,
>>>> I have had an idea.
>>>> Since it has been determined that everybody in the ARIN community with
>>>> an email address may participate in policy development, how does the
>>>> list feel about soliciting the input from a broader group of
>>>> participants?
>>>
>>> While not an absolute requirement, I believe there is an understanding
>>> that
>>> some minimal  level of technical expertise and interest in the details of
>>> the subject matter are necessary in order to provide useful or meaningful
>>> contribution to the process.
>>>
>>
>> So we would exclude members of the general public (users) then?
>
> Where did I say exclude?  "not an absolute requirement", an "interest in the
> details" are needed for a "meaningful contribution".  None of that means
> exclude in my book, it simply means that participation takes effort and if
> you want people to take you seriously you need to make a effort.  That is
> true in many parts of civil society.

"Not an absolute requirement" would generally translate to "not important".

Not all proposals related to IP addressing require technical
knowledge. Some are business oriented such as the proposal to provide
address for critical infrastructure for 36 mos.  I would argue that
technical contributions are "not an absolute requirement" to proposals
such as M&A and a few others and are actually harmful when co-mingled
with most technical requirements beyond extremely simply and straight
forward non engineering concepts like utilization.


Best,

-M<



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