Dear Scott,

I appreciate the innovative perspective and thorough thought process you've 
articulated in your email.

There are a couple of points I'd like to highlight:

The new policy shouldn’t be retroactive, it should be only a policy going 
forward. I mention it only because I think it’s important to make that 
distinction clear.

Secondly, I find your proposed approach in the second paragraph intriguing. 
It's far more nuanced than simply restricting everyone to a maximum of a /24. I 
believe you're onto something promising here, and it could serve as a sensible 
strategy moving forward.

Regarding the issue of "time," it's important to acknowledge the existence of a 
secondary market for IPs. If there's significant pressure, purchasing IPs 
should be considered a viable option rather than solely relying on expedited 
access through the waiting list. Maintaining a balance is key; those with 
urgent needs can acquire IPs through purchase, while others can join the 
waiting list and adhere to the traditional process. Personally, I believe this 
approach strikes a fair and equitable balance.

-Denis



On 16 Feb 2024, at 21:14, Scott Leibrand <[email protected]> wrote:

The point isn't to "improve the visual appearance of the waiting list numbers". 
Everyone knows the free pool is empty except for the reclaimed dregs, and we're 
deciding who should get how much of the dregs. The point of this proposal, 
limiting the maximum allocation to /24, is to allocate smaller netblocks to 
organizations that have been waiting a shorter amount of time, instead of 
making everyone wait longer while those with a non-time-sensitive justification 
for a larger block can get one and those who only need a smaller block wait in 
line longer.

Another alternative to limiting everyone to a /24 would be to prioritize the 
waitlist such that everyone's place in line is determined by how long they've 
been waiting divided by how many /24s they're requesting. So at any given time, 
we might be fulfilling /24 requests that have been waiting 6 months, /23 
requests that have been waiting a year, and /22 requests that have been waiting 
2 years. (Or 1, 2, and 4 years, respectively.) That way no one is penalized for 
accepting a smaller block, and an organization who can usefully use a /24 now 
and a /24 later gets a /23 worth of space in the same amount of time as someone 
holding out for a contiguous /23.

-Scott

On Fri, Feb 16, 2024 at 12:56 PM Denis Motova 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear William,

I appreciate your message and your input.

I have some reservations about agreeing with the statement you made, and I'll 
explain my reasoning below:

I strongly believe that there are numerous legitimate businesses currently on 
the waiting list seeking IP space allocations of /22, /23, and /24. By removing 
the option for these allocations, we essentially transform the waiting list 
into what you described in a previous post as catering to "hobbyists and 
speculators." It's unlikely that any serious company would require only 256 IPs 
within a network; that's essentially a micro-network.

As you are aware, there are multiple avenues for obtaining IP space, including 
the waiting list and authorized purchase methods. From my perspective, if a 
business urgently needs IP space, they would likely follow the example of AWS 
and invest in acquiring the necessary resources rather than wait through the 
waiting list.

For instance, one of our customers acquired a /17 by purchasing it from the 
market after providing justifications to ARIN for the IP space. While this 
involved a significant financial investment, it demonstrated the seriousness of 
their business needs.

I fail to see the value in limiting everyone's network size solely to improve 
the visual appearance of the waiting list numbers.

Thank you once again for your collaborative spirit and feedback.

Sincerely,
Denis


On 16 Feb 2024, at 15:52, William Herrin 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

On Fri, Feb 16, 2024 at 8:52 AM Denis Motova 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
A. Decreasing the allocation to a /24 means that new allocation
holders would receive a minuscule network, hardly sufficient for
small to mid-sized deployments.

Hi Denis,

At this point, the wait list is for hobbyists and speculators: people
who can afford to wait, which a serious business cannot.

Tell me I'm wrong.

Regards,
Bill Herrin


--
William Herrin
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
https://bill.herrin.us/

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