On Jun 6, 2013, at 2:57 PM, Owen DeLong 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
If you claim you gave a customer a /48 and the customer reports that they are 
not allowed to exercise control over the use of that /48, then, you have not, 
in fact, delegated authority over that /48 as you have claimed to ARIN and that 
is, in fact, resource fraud in violation of ARIN policy. I'm not sure why you 
think this is an absurd claim.

Because you haven't cited a policy that substantiates it, despite claiming to 
have written the policy that would say this.

There are enough bits to do it in your first allocation. Whether you will be 
able to get a subsequent allocation when you run out without achieving 
sufficiently efficient utilization later due to the inefficiencies imposed by 
this particular style of use is the open question. Other than you, most posters 
seem to recognize that this is, in fact, a likely drawback.

Yes, we're aware that it's a drawback.   Consumption of address space is a 
drawback of using a 64-bit host identifier, too.   But it's not a strong 
argument against doing it.   You seem to feel _really_ strongly about this; is 
it really the case that your only objection is that you think it's not possible 
for an ISP to get enough bits to do it?

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