Bill,

Suggest you read the staff assessment again as well as review the training 
mentioned below. Again, customers provide their own default for what they 
assign to their customers or end users. ARIN recommends the industry standard 
of /48 but it can be /56 or /64 if they wish. In fact, we have some customers 
that due to the nature of their business use a mixture of the 3 different 
sizes. This information is included in all the information provided to our 
customers. Most of ARIN’s customers look to ARIN to provide the necessary 
information and training to come up with the proper block size to request. ARIN 
works extensively to help our customers with their requests if they do not have 
the experience and knowledge to figure it out in-house.

Thanks,
John S.



From: William Herrin <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, February 16, 2026 at 7:30 PM
To: John Sweeting <[email protected]>
Cc: DeLong Owen <[email protected]>, [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2025-6: Fix formula in 6.5.2.1c

On Tue, Feb 17, 2026 at 2:31 AM John Sweeting <[email protected]> wrote:
> This is not true. ARIN follows policy as mandated and allows
> customers to select their default size for downstream reassignment.
> This is very clear in “ARIN’s IPv6 Address Planning Basics” located
> in the ARIN Academy. ARIN does encourage /48 as industry standard
> but the customer may determine their own default in accordance
> with policy and ARIN training material.

Hi John,

With due respect, I was told across multiple inquiries that ARIN
presumes the PAU to be /48 for the purposes of policy section 6.5.2.1,
the staff assessment was clear about ARIN's disuse of the second
paragraph of NRPM section 6.5.2.1c where the requirement appears, I
reported ARIN's disuse of that policy component at the October meeting
without contradiction, and I reported PAU issue even more explicitly
to the AC again without contradiction.

Are you now telling me that all of that was in error, that ARIN does
in fact inquire into the ISP's intended downstream assignment size and
that ARIN does in fact scale the ISP's entitlement based on their
response in the manner Owen correctly describes the policy to require?
That contrary to prior report, ARIN _does_ implement the second
paragraph of section 6.5.2.1c?

If not, I respectfully submit that denial is unseemly and the time has
come to find out what the community wants done about the
misimplementation. They're the ones who are supposed to be in the
number policy driver's seat. Let's make sure they are.

Regards,
Bill Herrin
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