There are currently 246 entries on the waiting list that were there prior to 
the suspension.   Maybe some thought should go into allowing those 
organizations to get their requested minimum acceptable prefix size using the 
500k addresses ARIN is reclaiming.  Anything that was added to the list after 
Feb 7 2019 ( the date the suspension was posted) would be subject to the new 
policy, whatever that may be.

Tom Pruitt

From: ARIN-PPML <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Tom Fantacone
Sent: Thursday, May 16, 2019 9:01 AM
To: John Curran <[email protected]>
Cc: arin-ppml <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Advisory Council Recommendation Regarding NRPM 4.1.8. 
Unmet Requests

At 06:18 PM 5/15/2019, John Curran wrote:

On 15 May 2019, at 2:47 PM, Tom Fantacone 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> If we remove the waiting list activity of this one fraudster, how much
> "statistically likely" fraud is left?
> Was this one bad actor so bad that he accounted for almost all the likely
> fraud on the waiting list?
> Do we still even have a waiting list problem?

Approximately half of the address blocks that were received from the waiting 
list and subsequently transferreed are affiliated with MICFO entities.

That's a lot of addresses and a high percentage of all waiting list 
allocations.  The genesis of ARIN suspending the waiting list and 
requesting/recommending changes to it to prevent fraud was the appearance of  
"likely fraud" based on the behavior of a small handful of bad actors robbing 
the waiting list of a large number of addresses.  Am I right to assume that 
there was really one bad actor (with a handful of bad aliases)?

Obviously ARIN cannot state with certainty that there is no other fraud on the 
list, but if Micfo and its entities had never done what they did, would ARIN 
have even seen a problem with the waiting list?

John Sweeting's presentation of suspected waiting list abuse is here:
Youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MJHgs4wWO58
Transcript:
https://www.arin.net/vault/participate/meetings/reports/ARIN_42/ppm1_transcript.html#anchor_5

If virtually all this misbehavior was this one guy, and he's been stopped, do 
we still want to change the waiting list system and hurt the overwhelming 
majority of honest players?


> Perhaps we still want to take strong measures to prevent this from
> happening in the future, but before making that determination, I'd like
> to know the answers to the above
>
> And on a related note, can anyone at ARIN tell us the total aggregate
> space that is currently being requested on the waiting list?

The entire waiting list is available here - 
https://www.arin.net/resources/guide/ipv4/waiting_list/

Thanks, John.  I was looking for totals but the list was easy enough to import 
into a spreadsheet and tally up.  By my count the space being requested totals 
to roughly 825K addresses, and about 775K is the "minimum acceptable size" 
total.  The 500K addresses ARIN is reclaiming will go a long way in satisfying 
that demand.

Are any of the existing waiting list requests from Micfo entities or have those 
already been scrubbed?



Thanks!
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers

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