Hi Isaiah,

 

That RIPE situation is an unfortunate artifact of their reserve pool for new 
entrants.

Can you share the percent of those /24s that begin with 185?

 

You didn’t support Noah’s theory that this policy proposal would lead to the 
demise of RIRs, so let’s address your particular objections.

 

First you wrote “The onus is not on ARIN to sanctify practices that some are 
already engaging in, but rather to distribute number resources in accordance 
with community developed policy.”

 

My answer is that this policy proposal continues to distribute number resources 
in accordance with community developed policy.

 

Second you wrote:” If other RIR communities choose to make other decisions, 
that doesn't make it the correct decision for the ARIN region.”

 

I would agree with you, but that doesn’t mean we should ignore relevant data 
from our sister registry, and I brought up RIPE to deal with Noah’s objection 
about what will happen should this policy pass”

 

Third you wrote “There is a waiting list available for legitimate new entrants, 
and I don't buy the argument that networks with greater than a /20 cannot 
afford the capital outlay to purchase a block.”

 

Then you won’t have to worry about leasing, because you claim there is no 
market for it. The waiting list is not a guaranty, and has an unpredictable 
schedule for address delivery. I gave an example of a WISP seeking to try out a 
new area, and why leasing addresses might be quite attractive to that WISP for 
entirely legitimate reasons. 

 

I feel I have addressed what I see as the objections you have noted.

 

Now, why not try to actually address even one of my assertions and tell me 
where it fails?

“Opposing this policy means the only lessors are the lucky incumbents. 

Opposing this policy means a lack of policy is preferred, despite the open 
practice of leasing.

Opposing this policy provides incentive for registry-shopping and address 
outflow.

Opposing this policy reduces the lessor pool and drives up lease rates.

Opposing this policy dis-incentivizes accurate registration”

 

Regards,
Mike

 

 

 

 

From: Isaiah Olson <[email protected]> 
Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2021 5:07 PM
To: Mike Burns <[email protected]>; 'Noah' <[email protected]>
Cc: 'ARIN-PPML List' <[email protected]>
Subject: Draft Policy ARIN-2021-6: Remove Circuit Requirement

 

Mike,

I would hardly say it's time for a funeral in RIPE, but I would ask, do you 
think it's a coincidence that roughly 75% of the /24 blocks that I have 
blackholed on my network for spamming my email server are registered to 
anonymous hosting companies in the RIPE region? I don't agree that the results 
of the RIPE policy speak for themselves, and I would love to see more data 
aggregated by some of the more talented internet sleuths on here regarding the 
proportion of abuse activity split up by RIR. I also disagree with all five of 
your assumptions about opposing this policy. The onus is not on ARIN to 
sanctify practices that some are already engaging in, but rather to distribute 
number resources in accordance with community developed policy. If other RIR 
communities choose to make other decisions, that doesn't make it the correct 
decision for the ARIN region. I don't support any policy that amplifies the 
practice of leasing because I reject your arguments about the necessity of the 
practice. There is a waiting list available for legitimate new entrants, and I 
don't buy the argument that networks with greater than a /20 cannot afford the 
capital outlay to purchase a block. Please feel free to provide any data you 
can to back up your five assertions. For my assertion, please consider the 
following:

Prefixes exchanged within the RIPE region as sales originate have the highest 
fraction of blacklisted IPs, which is statistically significant.

Source: 
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/139789/1/VGiotsas_PAM2020_IPv4_Transfers_abuse.pdf

- Isaiah

On 9/21/2021 3:24 PM, Mike Burns wrote:

I am in total agreement with your sentiment and the requirement for a circuit 
should continue to stand.

 

Any policy that removes such a requirement would render the management of 
Internet Number Resources by the registry useless and thereby essentially lead 
to no need for the registry after all.

 

Noah

 

Hi Noah,

 

Are you aware that there has been no needs-test for RIPE transfers for many 
years and the RIR system hasn’t collapsed?

 

To make it clear, in RIPE you can purchase address space with the sole purpose 
of leasing it out. And you have been able to do that for many years now.  
Plainly, openly, within all policy. So please let us know where to send the 
flowers for RIPE’s funeral. That goes for others who predict that bad things 
will follow from adopting this policy, please keep RIPE’s example in mind to 
provide a reality check. The experiment has already been performed.

 

Owen has already pointed out the futility of the circuit requirement in 
practice,  yet you think that’s what keeps the RIR system functional?

 

Opposing this policy means the only lessors are the lucky incumbents. 

Opposing this policy means a lack of policy is preferred, despite the open 
practice of leasing.

Opposing this policy provides incentive for registry-shopping and address 
outflow.

Opposing this policy reduces the lessor pool and drives up lease rates.

Opposing this policy dis-incentivizes accurate registration.

 

Let me know if any of these assertions require amplification, I guess some may 
not be clear but this is already too long.

 

Regards,
Mike

 

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