On May 2, 2019, at 5:31 PM, William Herrin <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> As we evaluate the proposal, legal risk is one of the things we'll want to 
> consider. If ARIN tries to enforce a revocation and loses, the policies which 
> permit them to reject registration changes land on much shakier ground. ARIN 
> could end up a pure registry without any policy role despite what its members 
> want. That's one reason the organization has been so reluctant to try.

Bill -

Please do not speak for ARIN (“That's one reason the organization has been so 
reluctant to try”), as there are folks (ie myself) who have that responsibility.

To be clear, ARIN has _zero_ concerns about enforcing registry policy on all 
number resources in the ARIN registry, regardless of origin or pedigree.  To 
state otherwise is incorrect. 

The organizational concern is with new policy which involves new 
responsibilities; ie, ones which are not directly related to administration of 
the registry.  Because ARIN has the ability to unilaterally change number 
resource policy (via processes in the PDP), it has a corresponding duty of fair 
dealing with all to whom that policy applies.  

Policy which creates new obligations at the time of a request (eg transfer 
policy) have the benefit that resource holders may freely decide to make the 
request (or not) based on their circumstances and the policy requirements.  
Policy which creates new obligations unilaterally applied to all existing 
resource holders could easily be seen as other than fair dealing,  if indeed 
the obligations are unrelated to obligations necessary for registry 
administration and the existing obligations in our registration services 
agreement.

For example. if the community were to pass a number resource policy that 
requires all resource holders to remit 2% of their annual revenues to ARIN (or 
have the resources revoked), then I am fairly confident it would not survive 
equitable dealing challenges, even if only such challenges were mounted solely 
by those who are under RSA.

No one would expect a vendor agreement to be unilaterally modified to include 
significant new obligations outside of the existing scope, and ARIN policy 
which creates obligations in how ISPs manage their routing is definitely a new 
area of obligation - fair dealing with the community is the reason for 
trepidation regarding such policy changes.

Thanks!
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers


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