You know what amuses me about this whole thread.

One of the concerns raised about this policy – time and again – is that it 
would be used to selectively target people.

Then – we were told that wasn’t the case – and the policy was made to refer to 
random selection and evidence base etc.

Yet what I am reading here – is people deliberately – in the context of this 
proposal – going after one company – with zero evidence to back up any of their 
claims that the allocation was or wasn’t legitimate, and despite the fact that 
the application had to be granted in the context of the IPv4 policy – which 
means the host masters would have checked the application.

So – is this policy actually what I have always feared – a tool to be used to 
go on witch hunts with no hard evidence that anyone wants to make public? Or 
are we saying that we don’t trust the host masters when they allocation space 
to do their checks correctly?  If it’s the latter – how do you propose to deal 
with the fact that if they couldn’t get the allocation right – what makes you 
think they can audit correctly? (And I am in no way saying that the allocation 
wasn’t legitimate, or that they screwed up, I am not privy to those application 
documents to know – and neither is anyone else here)

But basically – this thread – is progressively proving that one of my (and 
other peoples) major concerns about this policy were dead on target – that some 
individuals are attempting to pass a policy to go after things they don’t feel 
are correct – whats next – going after the next guy who disagrees with you – or 
argues with you?

I started this email saying it amuses me – the fact that the fears are being 
shown to be very correct is amusing – at the same time – its horrifying to see 
the policy process abused in this manner.

Andrew


From: Komi Elitcha <[email protected]>
Sent: 18 December 2018 10:49
To: Owen DeLong <[email protected]>
Cc: General Discussions of AFRINIC <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Community-Discuss] Issue with non-AFRINIC Fellowship to Meeting -

Owen,

The association between larus, cloud innovation and outsideHeaven has been 
shared on this list before -  
https://lists.afrinic.net/pipermail/rpd/2017/007352.html<https://lists.afrinic.net/pipermail/rpd/2017/007352.html>

Curiously, you always have strong opinions about policy proposals, but never 
have time to look archives to clarify important points  or propose amendments.

This is not constructive considering the volume of your contributions 
especially as you come from another region.  It is even worse when viewed in 
the context of Afrinic region where every little progress is treasured 
development.

You have been arguing about objections that have not been addressed and I find 
it bizarre that you could not find them....despite my efforts to provide you an 
initial list.

Komi

Le sam. 15 déc. 2018 à 2:41 AM, Owen DeLong 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> a écrit :



On Dec 14, 2018, at 16:01 , Komi Elitcha 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:




Owen

Larus is a resource holder like any other resource holder. The fact that

they are a large resource holder does not make them any worse or

better than any other resource holder, so I’m not sure why you believe

the number of IPv4 addresses they hold have any bearing on the

discussion.
What make Larus singular is that this organization through an LIR membership, 
holds 6 million IPv4 space, more IPv4  space than even countries like Nigeria, 
Kenya and Algeria (*). The same Larus has no real Internet infrastructure 
on-continent nor any serious services being consumed  by customers on the 
continent.

If your statements are true (they aren’t), then how did AfriNIC approve such 
numbers being issued?

With NO network, lack of local staff in Africa that could contribute to  
discussions on Afrinic list or even attend AfriNIC meetings except the known 
Individual based out of Africa.

Again, more assertions without evidence.


Therefore besides contracting individual mercenaries to visibly help protect 
and defend the huge IPv4 pool it holds, by opposing the review policy by all 
means, one would wonder what value Larus really contributes to the AfriNIC 
community  besides sponsoring  newbie students to interfere with PDP.

OK… I get it that you don’t like Larus. Nonetheless, While I have worked with 
Larus and I know that some of your assertions don’t match  reality, I am not 
bought and paid for
by Laurs and my opposition to the review policy has nothing to do with their 
holdings or the fact that Larus also opposes the review policy.

My first work with Larus began shortly before the Dakar meeting last June. You 
can review the record for yourself, you will see that I have expressed 
objection to every version of the review policy since its inception well before 
the Dakar meeting and well before my having any connection whatsoever to Larus.


That is where  the problem lays…

This is where you think the problem lies.

I think that your baseless accusations and your assumption that Larus uses 
their addresses in violation of the policies under which they were issued is 
part of where the problem lies. I think that the single-minded pursuit of an 
agenda against a single resource member by most of the proponents of this 
policy is beginning to show this policy for what it truly is… An attack on 
large resource members by another portion of the community.

Larus is a convenient target, but they are not the only opposition to the 
review policy.

Multiple people with no association to Larus have expressed opposition.

Review the archives. While your above admission that Larus is the main target 
of this policy is enlightening regarding the motives of the proponents, the 
reality is that Larus is just one of many organizations affiliated with voices 
opposing this proposal.

Owen

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