[arin-ppml] 2016-3 Revisited

Mike Burns mike at iptrading.com
Fri Feb 3 17:45:29 EST 2017


Hi Owen,

 

As far as I know, Ripe does not require that, only addresses sourced in ARIN or APNIC require a needs test at RIPE.

And thank you for demonstrating  yet again that you are basing these policy decisions on a fear of market manipulation.

You ignored the various reasons why we do not have to fear this, and the absence of evidence of such attempts.

Can you present any evidence of IPv4 transfer market manipulation or speculation that does not involve free-pool plundering?

 

I think that if we are bound to clutter the NRPM over these fears, some evidence should be forthcoming.

After all, we are the stakeholders who have some control over the situation and certainly would have time to erect one of these policy barriers in the case that such evidence arose. 

 

Regards,
Mike

 

 

 

From: Owen DeLong [mailto:owen at delong.com] 
Sent: Friday, February 03, 2017 5:26 PM
To: Mike Burns <mike at iptrading.com>
Cc: David Huberman <daveid at panix.com>; arin-ppml at arin.net
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] 2016-3 Revisited

 

No, Mike, You are missing that “an organization’s business purpose” may be something other than “running an operational network”.

 

We are attempting to ensure that the addresses go to those who intend to use them in an operational network, rather than treating them as a commodity futures investment, speculative transaction, or other financial manipulation at the expense of the internet.

 

Even RIPE requires you to use at least half of the addresses on an operational network.

 

Owen

 

On Feb 3, 2017, at 07:53 , Mike Burns <mike at iptrading.com <mailto:mike at iptrading.com> > wrote:

 

Hi David,

 

I appreciate you trying to make me understand.

So are you assuming in your example that you seek to purchase space that you do not need for your business purposes.

My argument is that organizations do not purchase space for which they don’t feel there is a valid business purpose.  Now it’s true that an organization’s perception of need will vary from the one which is being rigorously defined here, but there is an obvious brake on the purchase of items for which there is not a business purpose.

 

And for those whom we are imagining who are determined to somehow go around policy to acquire un-necessary space, there are already plenty of workarounds, the simplest of which is to acquire RIPE space.

 

Am I missing something obvious that requires this additional complexity to what was a nice smooth section of the NRPM?  

 

Regards,

Mike

 

 

From: David Huberman [ <mailto:daveid at panix.com> mailto:daveid at panix.com] 
Sent: Friday, February 03, 2017 10:43 AM
To: Mike Burns < <mailto:mike at iptrading.com> mike at iptrading.com>
Cc: Jason Schiller < <mailto:jschiller at google.com> jschiller at google.com>;  <mailto:arin-ppml at arin.net> arin-ppml at arin.net
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] 2016-3 Revisited

 

Mike,

 

I buy a /13. I abuse the spirit of 2016-3, meant for smaller transfers as our first attempt at no needs testing, by reiterating /16 transfers one after the other.

 

Market pricing doesn't stop this, and the ARIN community who participates in public policy matters has made it clear that an incremental approach towards needs testing is a good thing.

 

David

Sent from my iPhone


On Feb 3, 2017, at 10:34 AM, Mike Burns < <mailto:mike at iptrading.com> mike at iptrading.com> wrote:

 

If that approach still doesn't work can you suggest some other mechanism to prevent abuse that does not prevent an organization who needs IP space from using this policy?  

 

 

Hi Jason,

 

Why are we ignoring the mechanism that prevents organizations from buying un-needed anything? To wit, they have to pay money for these addresses. You guys are spinning up unlikely scenarios and ignoring the 800lb. elephant in the room… the cost of these addresses is the mechanism you seek.  

 

Regards,

Mike

 

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