[arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2015-3: Remove 30 day utilization requirement in end-user IPv4 policy

David Farmer farmer at umn.edu
Mon Oct 5 15:45:58 EDT 2015


Again, philosophically I agree with the one policy for all mantra, but 
how do we get there.  I believe the intent of the author is to find bite 
size chunks to move is toward a one policy for all model.

Thanks.

On 10/5/15 14:24 , Azinger, Marla wrote:
> I don't support this proposal.  I believe if restrictions are removed, then both End User and ISP should be aligned entirely.  One policy for all.
>
> Regards
> Marla Azinger
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net] On Behalf Of ARIN
> Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2015 11:58 AM
> To: arin-ppml at arin.net
> Subject: [arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2015-3: Remove 30 day utilization requirement in end-user IPv4 policy
>
> Draft Policy ARIN-2015-3
> Remove 30 day utilization requirement in end-user IPv4 policy
>
> On 21 May 2015 the ARIN Advisory Council (AC) accepted "ARIN-prop-217 Remove 30 day utilization requirement in end-user IPv4 policy" as a Draft Policy.
>
> Draft Policy ARIN-2015-3 is below and can be found at:
> https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2015_3.html
>
> You are encouraged to discuss the merits and your concerns of Draft Policy 2015-3 on the Public Policy Mailing List.
>
> The AC will evaluate the discussion in order to assess the conformance of this draft policy with ARIN's Principles of Internet Number Resource Policy as stated in the PDP. Specifically, these principles are:
>
>     * Enabling Fair and Impartial Number Resource Administration
>     * Technically Sound
>     * Supported by the Community
>
> The ARIN Policy Development Process (PDP) can be found at:
> https://www.arin.net/policy/pdp.html
>
> Draft Policies and Proposals under discussion can be found at:
> https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/index.html
>
> Regards,
>
> Communications and Member Services
> American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
>
>
> ## * ##
>
>
> Draft Policy ARIN-2015-3
> Remove 30 day utilization requirement in end-user IPv4 policy
>
> Date: 26 May 2015
>
> Problem Statement:
>
> End-user policy is intended to provide end-users with a one year supply of IP addresses. Qualification for a one-year supply requires the network operator to utilize at least 25% of the requested addresses within 30 days. This text is unrealistic and should be removed.
>
> First, it often takes longer than 30 days to stage equipment and start actually using the addresses.
>
> Second, growth is often not that regimented; the forecast is to use X addresses over the course of a year, not to use 25% of X within 30 days.
>
> Third, this policy text applies to additional address space requests. It is incompatible with the requirements of other additional address space request justification which indicates that 80% utilization of existing space is sufficient to justify new space. If a block is at 80%, then often (almost always?) the remaining 80% will be used over the next 30 days and longer. Therefore the operator cannot honestly state they will use 25% of the ADDITIONAL space within 30 days of receiving it; they're still trying to use their older block efficiently.
>
> Fourth, in the face of ARIN exhaustion, some ISPs are starting to not give out /24 (or larger) blocks. So the justification for the 25% rule that previously existed (and in fact, applied for many years) is no longer germane.
>
> Policy statement:
>
> Remove the 25% utilization criteria bullet point from NRPM 4.3.3.
>
> Comments:
>
> a.Timetable for implementation: Immediate
>
> b.Anything else
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David Farmer               Email: farmer at umn.edu
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