The concern here is not about ISPs getting asns - it is deeper than that.

In order for the internet environment to thrive we need the potential for large 
scale interconnection that is predicated on companies having asns - and this 
includes enterprise customers across all sectors.

Interconnection and free traffic exchange is critical to the growth of the 
internet industry and our goals of getting to a majority of content being 
exchanged directly on the continent.  It is also critical to build the critical 
mass, a requirement to justify the investment in infrastructure such as data 
centers.

Yes while my stats were proven wrong, it still deeply concerns me that when I 
compare our asn allocation stats to that of lacnic (the closest comparison to 
where afrinic and Africa is out of the other RIRs - you find that our ASN 
allocation rate year by year for many years is essentially flat - we hit 150 to 
160 allocated every year - but there is no compounded growth that you see in 
LACNIC where they are allocation well over a thousand asns a year and the 
allocation numbers have been growing each year.

It is also a concern to me that of the roughly 1600 asns allocated - of those 
less than 1200 are visible in the DFZ.

Andrew

Liquid Telecommunications - Group Head Of IP Strategy

________________________________
From: Chevalier du Borg <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, December 9, 2018 09:08
To: Andrew Alston
Cc: General Discussions of AFRINIC
Subject: Re: [Community-Discuss] Questions about AfriNIC Allocations



Le mar. 4 déc. 2018 à 11:26, Andrew Alston 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> a 
écrit :


As AFRINIC has a mandate to promote Internet growth across the continent, I 
really think it would be good to understand what their thoughts on this are – 
and no – before I get jumped on – I am not blaming AFRINIC for the drop – but 
it certainly does warrant questions being asked.


Even though your stat have been prove to be wrong. As former board member and 
current operator, you should know that many small ISP in Africa do not meet the 
"multi-homing" criteria. So there is natural limit to potential number of  ASN.


I have also meet many small ISP operator who have problem getting simple BGP 
with big operator. Maybe a skill problem for AFRINIC training team and AFNOG to 
address?

--
Borg le Chevalier
___________________________________
"Common sense is what tells us the world is flat"
_______________________________________________
Community-Discuss mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo/community-discuss

Reply via email to