While I think $1250/year for a /24 of space seems a bit high, I see no reason 
that legacy allocations should remain free.   Perhaps $100/year (like an ASN 
is) would be reasonable for small legacy allocations.   This is especially 
important for end users who have these allocations as they would most likely be 
free from their upstream provider.

That being said, if it is larger than a few /24s I see no reason to not have 
the regular rates apply.   If you have a /16 and can't afford the fee, you 
can't possibly afford to fill it with machines and should simply be allowed to 
swap down to a smaller allocation.    Such a scheme would be in the best 
interest of all as it would all for some reclamation of numbering resources.

Charging something also seems as though it would help with the IP hording 
problem that is going on with legacy allocations.   It would also help to 
"automatically" expire allocations which are not in use as users would be less 
willing to pay for resources they are not using.


John :)

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: Joe Abley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Gesendet: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 11:20 AM
An: David Barak
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Betreff: Re: BGP Security and PKI Hierarchies



On 29-Nov-2005, at 12:16, David Barak wrote:

> Maybe my imagination just isn't good enough: could you
> toss me an example-type of organization where that
> would be problematic?

Oh, my mistake -- you're talking about new organisations looking to  
acquire PI space. I was talking about organisations who have  
grandfathered (and hence zero-fee) PI space.

I don't have any examples of the former, and I tend to agree with  
your assessment for that.


Joe

Reply via email to