On 2/7/14, 4:01 PM, William Herrin wrote:
...You don't fall in to part B until your 10,000 employee US-based company wants to network its 50-person offices in Tokyo, Paris and Cairo. Or the thousand-person office in London to which ARIN should say, "Whoa! Time you talked to RIPE." Regards, Bill Herrin
And if the 1000-person office in London has no local egress to the Internet and is instead getting all connectivity over the circuit they have going back to HQ in Virginia, the company in Virginia should be going to RIPE and getting a second block of address space (instead of using a larger aggregate that it received from ARIN that it can advertise as a single route) for the London office why, exactly?
It can't possibly be for some technical reason, and we know that the RIRs were set up to make things easier, not to hoard addresses within certain regions, so what is it that makes going to RIPE the right answer in this case?
Matthew Kaufman _______________________________________________ PPML You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List ([email protected]). Unsubscribe or manage your mailing list subscription at: http://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/arin-ppml Please contact [email protected] if you experience any issues.
