I keep looking at these discussions and thinking how some as nonconformist even about stuff there is no much what to do. There is simply no IP address left and it is not possible to make up IP address out of thin air. Waiting list takes long because, guess what ... there is no IP space to supply all justified needs.

And I wonder what is the logic of proposing finish with the waiting list. Perhaps with this not existing anymore there would be less nonconformity, although would do nothing for addresses that keep being recovered and need to keep being distributed in the most fair way.
Guess what is the most fair way to do that ? The waiting list !

/22 is already nothing for a new comers to do something in their beginning, so they need to have a chance to do something minimal and wheever they grow they can go to market and keep going, but reducing the maximum allocation to a /23 would not help in any way to make the waiting list fairer and will make the life of newcomers who a able to get some tiny space from it more difficult.

Therefore abandon this proposal.

Fernando

On 22/12/2024 17:26, Denis Motova wrote:
Good Evening Everyone!

Amazing how much back and forth we’re having on this policy, absolutely brilliant! Let’s keep it up. My two cents on the matter is as follows:

1. There is a waiting list and any changes should include a provision that protects existing waiting list members. 2. I believe that only a /23 minimum would be acceptable, as a /24 is simply too small for any meaningful networks.

However, my actual thought process is on this, why change something that works already? Yes, we have a wait time that is slightly large, but ok… Why should everything be instant? I believe that we should be looking for meaningful changes not changes to address speed, and instant gratification.

Just my two cents on the matter.

Denis

On 21 Dec 2024, at 1:06 AM, William Herrin <[email protected]> wrote:

On Wed, Dec 18, 2024 at 12:10 PM Gerry E.. George <[email protected]> wrote:
We are now seeing 4 feasible options for this Draft Policy:
1. Consider revised policy as written (with proposed retroactive protections - still 3+-year lag and wait times); 2. Consider policy without any retroactive protections (reduction in wait times by ⅔s);
3. Do away with the Waitlist completely (new policy would be required);
4. Abandon the policy (essentially, do nothing, no changes to current operations)

One thing I'd like to point out:

Options 2 and 3 are not mutually exclusive with option 1.

We can adopt option 1 and continue discussing modification to requests
currently in the queue. If those discussions prove fruitless, adopting
option 1 will still leave us with a solution 3 years out.

We can adopt option 1 and continue discussing elimination of the
waitlist. Even if we do not find a better alternative to the waitlist,
it will at least become more functional in 3 years time.

Only option 4 conflicts with option 1, leaving us with zero progress
on the problem that the waitlist is just too darn long.

Regards,
Bill Herrin


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