> On Apr 26, 2019, at 13:54 , JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> Hi Owen,
> 
> So, you believe that if an ARIN member is repeatedly misusing the resources 
> from another member, is just fine and the ARIN membership which rules are the 
> policies, should not care about this behavior and members should not get 
> their exclusive rights to use their allocated resources protected by policies?

No… I believe that it is unlikely that ARIN members are the ones repeatedly 
misusing the resources.

Really, do you have some reason to believe that the majority of hijackers are 
actually RIR members? I have pretty strong reason based on both 
experience/observation of past hijacking events and my understanding of the 
social fabric of RIRs to believe that is unlikely.

> In other words. Will you at least support something in the line of:
> "The resources are allocated for the exclusive use of the recipient. 
> Consequently, other members can't use them (unless authorized by the 
> legitimate resource-holder) and not following this rule is a policy 
> violation”.

Sure, but what’s the point? If it’s non-members that are committing the 
hijacking (and I believe that is the case), what good does a restriction on 
other members do?

It’s sort of like saying “Law abiding citizens, please be aware that breaking 
the law will make you a non-law abiding citizen.”

It’s a lovely little tautology, but at the end of the day, it’s still a no-op.

Owen

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