> On Sep 19, 2021, at 06:32 , John Curran <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On 19 Sep 2021, at 12:15 AM, Mark McDonald <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>> Our rate hike alone covers the cost of responding to concerned organizations 
>> questioning why such a massive rate hike is needed that targets the smallest 
>> half of ARIN’s user base.  You realize the only reason people are 
>> complaining (and you’re on these forums defending it) is because such a few 
>> increase is almost unheard of, correct?  Of course the mega-carriers aren’t 
>> on here complaining - they’re paying less than *1%* of what /24 holders do.  
>> Just wait until the actual bills go out.
> 
> Mark - 
> 
> Actually, we’ve already spoken to some of the largest end-users whose fees 
> are going up quite significantly (e.g. several hundred per year to 32 
> thousand dollars per year or more) – the organizations I’ve spoken to have 
> wanted to understand the process and reasoning behind the change but have 
> otherwise been quite understanding. 
> 
>> ARIN’s “a /8 ISP assignment costs just as much as a /24 end user” reasoning 
>> is ridiculous.
> 
> I actually haven’t said that – what I said is that your assertion that the 
> costs are linear (i.e. per IP address represented) are not realistic, nor is 
> the single fee per-registry-object-regardless-of-size approach realistic. 
> 
> Our fee schedule scales in a geometric manner, so the smallest resource 
> holders are paying only $250/year and the largest paying hundreds of 
> thousands per year.   Does it reflect perfect cost allocation?  Almost 
> certainly not, since it generallizations the entire ARIN customer base into a 
> simple set of fee categories.  It may not be perfect but I believe it is as 
> simple, fair and clear as is possible under the circumstances. 
> 

You got two out of three. It’s as simple and clear as possible.

It clearly subsidizes LIRs on the backs of end users that are just ever so 
slightly larger than the very smallest.

It would probably be tolerable if LRSA+RSA didn’t equate to double billing.

However, the combination of those two factors makes it an intolerable rate hike.

Owen

_______________________________________________
ARIN-PPML
You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to
the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List ([email protected]).
Unsubscribe or manage your mailing list subscription at:
https://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/arin-ppml
Please contact [email protected] if you experience any issues.

Reply via email to