Dear Community Members:
I am writing to advise of additional changes made today to the text of Draft 
Policy ARIN-2015-2.
In the Staff and Legal analysis obtained, General Counsel expressed concerns 
about the proposed definitions of "affiliated" and "control". In light of these 
concerns and other efforts to simplify the text further, I have amended the 
text once again. The new amendments achieve the same intent as the previous 
language using much simpler and more concise language. The revised draft 
proposal is:

"Problem Statement:

Organizations that obtain a 24 month supply of IP addresses via the transfer 
market and then have an unexpected change in business plan are unable to move 
IP addresses to the proper RIR within the first 12 months of receipt.

Policy statement:
Replace 8.4, bullet 4, to read:
"Source entities within the ARIN region must not have received a transfer, 
allocation, or assignment of IPv4 number resources from ARIN for the 12 months 
prior to the approval of a transfer request, unless either the source and 
recipient entities own or control each other or are under common ownership or 
control. This restriction does not include M&A transfers."
Comments: Organizations that obtain a 24 month supply of IP addresses via the 
transfer market and then have an unexpected change in business plan are unable 
to move IP addresses to the proper RIR within the first 12 months of receipt. 
The need to move the resources does not flow from ARIN policy, but rather from 
the requirement of certain registries outside the ARIN region to have the 
resources moved in order to be used there.
The intention of this change is to allow organizations to perform inter-RIR 
transfers of space received via an 8.3 transfer regardless of the date 
transferred to ARIN. A common example is that an organization acquires a block 
located in the ARIN region, transfers it to ARIN, then 3 months later, the 
organization announces that it wants to launch new services out of region. 
Under current policy, the organization is prohibited from moving some or all of 
those addresses to that region's Whois if there is a need to move them to 
satisfy the rules of the other region requiring the movement of the resources 
to that region in order for them to be used there. Instead, the numbers are 
locked in ARIN's Whois. It's important to note that 8.3 transfers are approved 
for a 24 month supply, and it would not be unheard of for a business model to 
change within the first 12 months after approval. The proposal also introduces 
a requirement for an affiliation relationship between the source and recipient 
entity, based on established corporate law principles, so as to make it 
reasonably likely that eliminating the 12 month anti-flip period in that 
situation will meet the needs of organizations that operate networks in more 
than one region without encouraging abuse.
a. Timetable for implementation: Immediate
b. Anything else: N/A"
Chris Tacit
_______________________________________________
PPML
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