On 4 May 2019, at 1:13 PM, Hank Nussbacher 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

You're barking up the wrong tree here. ARIN can't exercise any authority the 
network operators don't consent to it exercising. It's that simple... and that 
complicated. You have to convince a usefully large number of network owners 
that they SHOULD cede ARIN new authority in this matter.

Can you point me at the document or standard that the network operators hereby 
granted ARIN the authority to allocate IP addresses?  I must have missed that.

Hank -

You’ve got it backwards…  ARIN operates a registry, and network operators 
_choose_ to use it.

Operators are under no obligation to make use of it, but it is true that use of 
the Internet Number Registry System provides networks operators a huge 
convenience (e.g. you don’t have to call the fifty thousand other entities 
routing on the Internet in order to determine the next available unused 
prefix...)   The "network effects” that result from this wide scale adoption 
are quite significant, and as such ARIN must take particular care in making 
sure that the obligations placed on parties using the registry are viewed as 
both relevant and necessary by the network operator community.

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers




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