Hi Dominik,

> I believe changing the policy will lead to exactly more of 1 - change won't 
> be registered with the NCC in order for the resource not to lose its legacy 
> status. 

This behavior is an anti-pattern and it also goes explicitly against the RIPE 
NCC process for legacy resource transfers. Hopefully, anyone engaging in these 
practices understands the risks they are assuming (for them and their customers 
if they are a service provider) by doing so. 

For clarity, this policy does not aim to affect transfers among LIRs within the 
same member account - understanding this would be effectively like 
M&A/organization restructure cases, which we understand can happen among higher 
ed and research entities that tend to be legacy resource holders too. The NCC 
would clarify this in the impact analysis report.

> This is significant especially that these changes don't have to be registered 
> in order to be able to use the space - i.e. be creating route objects in 
> alternate DBs.

This too is an anti-pattern we aim to prevent and it hinders RPKI adoption. 

> For that reason I oppose the proposal. If this is more of "extra work 
> required" type of issue - then let's solve it by putting the correct price 
> tag on it.

This portion will be addressed by the proposed charging scheme models that the 
NCC is working on presenting soon, following the Charging Scheme Task Force 
report. However, incentives will not be enough to stop certain actors from 
exploiting this loophole in RIPE policy.

Thank you,
Clara

On 10/30/25, 9:43 AM, "[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected] 
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Today's Topics:


1. Re: Early Feedback Requested on Upcoming Policy Proposal: Clarifying the 
non-transferability of legacy status
(Dominik Nowacki)




----------------------------------------------------------------------


Message: 1
Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2025 14:41:09 +0000
From: Dominik Nowacki <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [address-policy-wg] Re: Early Feedback Requested on Upcoming
Policy Proposal: Clarifying the non-transferability of legacy status
To: "[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Message-ID: <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>
RD10.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM>
Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="_000_DB9PR10MB497107
86C4D9F9386DDD1D89F2FBADB9PR10MB4971EURP_"


Dear Colleagues,
I agree with Max.
We don't quite have a horse in this race. Clouvider has 1x legacy subnet and is 
a member of the RIPE NCC regardless. We use it pretty much in the same way as 
if it was a PA.


Clara,
> 1 Keeping legacy status when the resources are no longer held by the 
> organization that received these pre-RIR administration is not really keeping 
> the database accurate/up-to-date.


I believe changing the policy will lead to exactly more of 1 - change won't be 
registered with the NCC in order for the resource not to loose its legacy 
status. This is significant especially that these changes don't have to be 
registered in order to be able to use the space - i.e. be creating route 
objects in alternate DBs.


For that reason I oppose the proposal. If this is more of "extra work required" 
type of issue - then let's solve it by putting the correct price tag on it.


Kind Regards,
Dominik


________________________________
From: Wade, Clara via address-policy-wg <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: 30 October 2025 14:29
To: Max Emig <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>; 
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [address-policy-wg] Re: Early Feedback Requested on Upcoming Policy 
Proposal: Clarifying the non-transferability of legacy status




Hi Max,






I’m a little confused by the counter-argument here. Could you clarify how you 
believe this proposal would this lead to out-of-date data and less RPKI 
adoption?






1. Keeping legacy status when the resources are no longer held by the 
organization that received these pre-RIR administration is not really keeping 
the database accurate/up-to-date.
2. Legacy resource holders by default do not have access to RPKI. (You may get 
access by signing an agreement with the NCC, but unless you do, RPKI services 
are not included in the basic package offered to legacy resource holders who 
are not members.)






Thank you,


Clara






From: Max Emig <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Wednesday, October 29, 2025 at 4:54 PM
To: "Wade, Clara" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: "[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>, 
"[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: RE: [EXTERNAL] [address-policy-wg] Early Feedback Requested on 
Upcoming Policy Proposal: Clarifying the non-transferability of legacy status






CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click 
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Good evening all,


I oppose this policy proposal as it may lead to an increase on out-of-date data 
and less RPKI adoption.


However, I would support adding a fee or another disincentive for keeping 
legacy status.


Thanks


Max


On 27 October, 2025 17:12 CET, "Wade, Clara via address-policy-wg" 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:






Hello everyone,






Following the suggestion of the RIPE NCC, we are seeking early feedback on an 
upcoming policy proposal we currently have in draft status.






As mentioned last week after the Registration Services update from Marco at the 
AP-WG session - Peter Hessler and I, members of the now concluded Charging 
Scheme Task Force, are drafting a policy proposal to clarify the 
non-transferability of legacy status to address the issues of increasing 
overhead for the RIPE NCC, increasing market speculation around a scarce 
resource and its impact on the adoption of best practices like RPKI. Our 
proposal will modify these existing policies:






1. “RIPE Resource Transfer Policies” (RIPE-807) with additional clarifications 
in the Transfer Restrictions section and the Inter-RIR policy section. M&A/org 
restructuring transfers will be explicitly excluded.


2. “RIPE NCC Services to Legacy Internet Resource Holders” (RIPE-639) with 
modifications to remove the language implying new holders can keep legacy 
status after transfer.






For background, legacy status was meant to indicate when an Internet resource 
had been directly assigned to the holder by IANA, before the RIRs were 
established. As such, ARIN, LACNIC and AFRINIC policies dictate that IPv4 
legacy resources will no longer be regarded as legacy resources after a policy 
transfer takes place (excluding M&A transfers). RIPE is the only RIR that 
currently allows the recipient of a legacy transfer the ability to inherit the 
legacy status that was assigned to the original holder by IANA. This is 
currently being used as a loophole by certain actors to opt out of having a 
contractual relationship with the RIPE NCC in order to circumvent:






1. RIPE registration services fees.
2. The 24-month transfer lock that was introduced by this working group to 
prevent flipping of scarce resources.


3. Needs-based inter-RIR transfer policy utilization requirements in the case 
of transfers from another RIR to a recipient of a legacy resource transfer in 
the RIPE region.






Following the publication of the Report of the RIPE NCC Charging Scheme Task 
Force, the membership learned that the RIPE NCC currently needs to dedicate a 
0.5FTE to process legacy transfers. There are currently around 2,400 legacy 
resources held by 1,600 holders with no contractual relationship with the RIPE 
NCC (neither direct nor via a sponsor). That is around 40M IPs total or 5% of 
RIPE IPv4 space. In the last four years, NCC staff have processed between 
370-280 legacy transfers per year, of which roughly a third do not involve a 
party with a contractual relationship with the NCC. Legacy transfers are more 
labor-intensive than other transfer types because the due diligence process 
requires the Registration Services team to manually source and verify 
pertaining documentation without the benefits of the automated processes for 
standard allocations. Legacy transfers take an average seven working hours to 
process when neither party has a contractual relationship with the NCC (around 
a third of legacy transfers), and six working hours to process when the parties 
have a contractual relationship with the NCC. If resources lost their legacy 
status after a transfer, these would then become standard allocations and staff 
could leverage enhanced compliance checks and automated processes to facilitate 
any future updates/transfers. These just take 1-3 working hours to process 
instead. Given that the task force was deemed out of scope for a policy change 
to address this gap, this is being brought to the attention of the Address 
Policy Working Group for action.










If there are any concerns, questions or considerations you would like to bring 
up before we submit this proposal for discussion in the next week or two, we 
would really appreciate hearing from you so we can address these and/or 
incorporate them.






Thanks in advance,


Clara Wade








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