David,

I agree with both of your edits.

I don’t believe either fundamentally change the current proposal, and I support 
the 2017-5 which a strong recommendation for those edits.

I would also add that the word netblock is not in the NRPM today and should be 
either “static IPv6 assignment” or possibly “reassigned IPv6 address blocks”.

Thanks,

Kevin Blumberg

From: ARIN-PPML [mailto:arin-ppml-boun...@arin.net] On Behalf Of David Farmer
Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2017 4:00 PM
To: ARIN <i...@arin.net>
Cc: arin-ppml@arin.net
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Revised: Draft Policy ARIN-2017-5: Equalization of 
Assignment Registration requirements between IPv4 and IPv6

I support what I think is the intent, but I have language/editorial nits;

1. In 3) below; Which is it "a /64 or more addresses" or "regardless of size" 
that requires registration?  I think logically we need one or the other, or 
some qualification on "regardless of size" statement.  I think it is a good 
idea to not require registration of less than a /64.  But the current language 
seems contradictory, and therefore confusing, my recommendation is delete 
"regardless of size", from the sentence and leaving "a /64 or more addresses".  
I pretty sure we don't want people having an expectation that they can request 
the registration of "their" /128 address.

2. Also in 3) below; It would seem to require even dynamic assignments be 
registered if requested, I don't think that is our intent either, section 
6.5.5.1 starts with "Each static IPv6 assignment containing", this needs a 
similar qualification.

Also, I'm fine with the deltas in the policy statement but it would be helpful 
to see the final resulting policy block, maybe in a separate email so we can 
all see how the result reads.

Thanks, I think we are getting close, maybe one or two more turns of the crank.

On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 12:06 PM, ARIN <i...@arin.net<mailto:i...@arin.net>> 
wrote:
The following has been revised:

* Draft Policy ARIN-2017-5: Equalization of Assignment Registration 
requirements between IPv4 and IPv6

Revised text is below and can be found at:
https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2017_5.html

You are encouraged to discuss all Draft Policies on PPML. 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 Policy 
Development Process (PDP). Specifically, these principles are:

* Enabling Fair and Impartial Number Resource Administration
* Technically Sound
* Supported by the Community

The 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,

Sean Hopkins
Policy Analyst
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)




Problem Statement:

Current ARIN policy has different WHOIS directory registration requirements for 
IPv4 vs IPv6 address assignments. IPv4 registration is triggered for an 
assignment of any address block equal to or greater than a /29 (i.e., eight 
IPv4 addresses). In the case of IPv6, registration occurs for an assignment of 
any block equal to or greater than a /64, which constitutes one entire IPv6 
subnet and is the minimum block size for an allocation.  Accordingly, there is 
a significant disparity between IPv4 and IPv6 WHOIS registration thresholds in 
the case of assignments, resulting in more work in the case of IPv6 than is the 
case for IPv4. There is no technical or policy rationale for the disparity, 
which could serve as a deterrent to more rapid IPv6 adoption. The purpose of 
this proposal is to eliminate the disparity and corresponding adverse 
consequences.

Policy statement:

1) Alter section 6.5.5.1 "Reassignment information" of the NRPM to strike "/64 
or more addresses" and change to "/47 or more addresses, or subdelegation of 
any size that will be individually announced,"

and

2) Alter section 6.5.5.3.1. "Residential Customer Privacy" of the NRPM by 
deleting the phrase "holding /64 and larger blocks"

and

3) Add new section 6.5.5.4 "Downstream Registration Requests" to the NRPM that 
reads "If the downstream recipient of a netblock ( a /64 or more addresses) 
requests publishing in ARIN's registration database, the ISP must register the 
netblock, regardless of size."

Comments:

a.    Timetable for implementation: Policy should be adopted as soon as 
possible.

b.    Anything else:

 Author Comments:

IPv6 should not be more burdensome than the equivalent IPv4 network size. 
Currently, assignments of /29 or more of IPv4 space (8 addresses) require 
registration. The greatest majority of ISP customers who have assignments of 
IPv4 space are of a single IPv4 address which do not trigger any ARIN 
registration requirement when using IPv4. This is NOT true when these same 
exact customers use IPv6, as assignments of /64 or more of IPv6 space require 
registration. Beginning with RFC 3177, it has been standard practice to assign 
a minimum assignment of /64 to every customer end user site, and less is never 
used.  This means that ALL IPv6 assignments, including those customers that 
only use a single IPv4 address must be registered with ARIN if they are given 
the minimum assignment of /64 of IPv6 space. This additional effort may prevent 
ISP's from giving IPv6 addresses because of the additional expense of 
registering those addresses with ARIN, which is not required for IPv4. The 
administrative burden of 100% customer registration of IPv6 customers is 
unreasonable, when such is not required for those customers receiving only IPv4 
connections.
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