On 13 Jul 2019, at 2:23 PM, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
...
Resources, are provided to the members for their own use or the use 
(authorized) of their customers. It doesn’t make sense at all to have unique 
registration if there is not such exclusivity.

That’s correct, but that right of exclusive use is with respect to ARIN’s 
registry.  We don’t provide any rights with regard to routing of IP address 
blocks, since it is up to each ISP to determine what routing it originates and 
accepts.

One more consideration, that may be different in the US/Canada law (or other 
countries covered by ARIN, and that’s why it makes sense to make it explicit). 
In Spain, there is a clear rule, even if is not in explicitly stated in the 
bylaws, of any membership organization: Members can’t act against other members 
in the scope of the membership rights.

Is that the same in US/Canada ? Or should we add an explicit text, if not 
already in the bylaws, in the RSA or policies, to state that?

This way, non-accidental violation of other members rights (regarding to unique 
and exclusive registration and use of the resources) will be clearly declared 
as prohibited conduct.

Jordi - We’ve actually covered this same question previously – the rights 
provided by ARIN are only with respect to ARIN’s registry and services.

No one is prohibited by law (or by agreement with ARIN) from configuring any IP 
address block in their routes or announcing any IP address block to other ISPs 
– it is the business practices of ISPs that generally frown on parties 
announcing routes for address blocks not theirs and absent the permission of 
the proper address holder, but that’s not a matter of law and doing so doesn’t 
violate ARIN’s RSA.

I definitively think we should have that consultation. Authors of prop-266 
never wanted to create routing rules. The goal has always been to make sure 
that the unique resources use right are recognized and defended.

The rights that one receives upon issuance are indeed recognized and are 
vigorously defended, but those rights are only with respect to ARIN’s registry 
and services.

I will also be fine if ARIN community decides as part of that, not to take 
actions, just to declare that there has been a violation, so the victims can 
use that outside ARIN in a legal claim. I think this will be very useful in 
courts. Now, there is nothing that courts can “look at”, because RSA and 
policies, don’t have a clear wording.

There’s no legal infringement at present (at least with respect to ARIN and its 
agreements) so there is no legal recourse to be sought.  If someone attempts to 
inappropriately obtain/hijack an address block in the ARIN registry, that is 
something contrary to our agreements and we will pursue remedies.

ARIN is a Internet number registry – we administer the registry on behalf of 
the community; we don’t control or administer the Internet routing system.

I think we all agree on that, but as said before, only registration of 
resources without a clear declaration that they are meant for the exclusive use 
of the resource-holder or its authorized parties, is not congruent.

It is quite congruent, once you realize that ARIN cannot provide rights to that 
which it does not control, so “exclusive use” granted is solely with respect to 
the ARIN registry.

If the ARIN members wish to change the RSA so that parties using the ARIN 
Registry also commit to only announcing routing for their own address blocks 
(and those address blocks for which they has obtained permission), then it 
would be possible to provide ARIN address holders the particular assurance that 
you seek - i.e. that no other ARIN registrant will announce routes into the 
public Internet for your assigned address blocks.   Such an assurance cannot 
presently be made, since ARIN has no control over the public Internet and no 
terms in our customer agreements regarding the routing that they can/cannot do.

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers

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