I also point out that there is nothing in any AfriNIC policy that requires an 
entity that is requesting space to have a license of any form, unless I have 
missed it – it may be something being asked for – but it’s not in policy and 
it’s not in the bylaws to my knowledge.

If anyone knows differently, please can you show it to me – because that’s an 
issue that I’ve argued for a long time

Andrew


From: Mark Elkins [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 20 April 2017 16:40
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Community-Discuss] "Fighting Internet Shutdown" - Any Role for 
AFRINIC?




On 20/04/2017 14:28, Noah wrote:
Hi Badru

People are talking about targeting executive branches of governments not 
knowing that most of the shutdown that have happened in the past including the 
one in Cameroon has a lot to do with the local countries politics, policies and 
regulation. Some countries governments don't shutdown the internet but they 
have some crazy regulations that censor the cyber space that you would not even 
want to live there.

For any organization to get number resources, the applicants are vetted by 
AFRINIC against their countries regulations (license of operation) which are a 
prerequisite for getting the IP resources from AFRINIC. This kind of 
relationship has existed between AFRINIC and all regulatory bodies in all 
countries that AFRINIC serve. What this basically mean is that if the country 
decided to deny an entity a license to operate, that entity cant access number 
resources from AFRINIC which means its only the local regulations that 
determine internet development, expansion and freedom and not AFRINIC.

Ah - but this is not necessarily true. In South Africa, we were getting IP 
resources before there were ISP licenses. You also don't need an ISP license to 
do Web Hosting - and as I understand, neither the ZACR or DNS in South Africa 
have ISP licenses - but run the ccTLD between them.  Both organisations have 
their own address space. The same goes for JINX (CINX/DINX) the ISPAs exchange 
points. No licenses. Some people with their own infrastructure at Teraco (data 
warehouse) - no licenses - but they have address space. Universities don't have 
licenses either. That probably holds true for all African countries. I'd guess 
End users generally fall into this category. I guess governments do too.

AFRINIC staff  use there best ability to decide on the requirements. a License 
is a reasonably easy criteria to ask for but I believe that if AFRINIC was 
aware that the government was not playing fair - then licenses would not be a 
criteria to getting address space. However, if you apply as an ISP and need a 
license but can't operate in that country - then I guess you wouldn't need 
address space.

I am sure if you have a college and apply to AFRINIC - you'll be able to get 
address space.


Dont bite the hand that feeds you. I rest my case...

Noah

On 18 Apr 2017 5:44 p.m., "Badru Ntege" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
+1  Noah well put.

 If we do not seek to understand through dialogue we become the same as those 
forcing shutdowns where unfortunately for us in reality we have very limited 
bargaining powers with a sovereign state.  As much as we might want to think 
otherwise.

Regards





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