Working with remote and rural community's...

"customers have autonomy in selection of their service providers" .

For a major urban center autonomy in selection is an option. For the realities 
of communities just a couple hundred kilometres away from urban centres, 
choices (if any) become fewer. For remote communities,  typically only the one 
option.


Sent from my BlackBerry — the most secure mobile device
From: [email protected]
Sent: April 10, 2019 12:53
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2019-4: Allow Inter-regional IPv6 
Resource Transfers


(off topic)
> customers have autonomy in selection of their service providers

ha ha haah=ahaaahahahahah oh wow.  *MAYBE* in the commercial space. I surveyed 
all of my friends and family at one point and got over 800+ replies all across 
the US, and only 4-- FOUR == a small fraction of a percent!! -- had a choice of 
providers for at least 10+Mb/sec internet service.

Maybe Canada has it better, but I haven't heard that the Caribbean has 
significant choice either. Mexico has the same non-overlap in the market as the 
US.

On topic for ARIN but not for African ISPs: I don't think that ARIN policy 
should revolve around Republican beliefs that the market always provides 
competition. History shows that the market will choose not to compete whenever 
possible, and will even strike agreements not to compete. Thus ARIN has a 
responsibility IMHO to ensure that customers receive baseline services -- to 
whatever extent it is possible within ARIN's charter.

On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 6:44 AM John Curran 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 9 Apr 2019, at 9:33 AM, Job Snijders <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:

I'd like to draw the community's attention to the following joint
announcement from two of Africa's largest IP transit providers.
...
It should be incontestable now that ARIN resource holders are at a
disadvantage when it comes to RPKI services.

Job -

Indeed.  It’s similarly incontestable that customers of those service providers 
are at a disadvantage to customers of other service provider in Africa that do 
provide complete routing validation including for ARIN-region resource holders. 
  One of the benefits of our loosely coordinated Internet is that service 
providers have autonomy in how they run their network, and customers have 
autonomy in selection of their service providers.

/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers

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