IMO the justifcation is probably in other areas of their business like cloud 
services, data center, etc. 

Obvisouly, it was compelling enough to warrant ARIN's approval for allocation 
of the space in the last stretch of IPv4. All /16 and larger requests goes to 
IPv4 review team anyway. 
So, again I bet it was almost all cloud/data center stuff. Unless they are 
launching some new kind of service or it's a market specific allocation.

Judging from the ARIN IPv4 Space Available counter actually looks like ARIN 
might in Phase 2 now of the countdown but I am not sure.

Otis
-----Original Message-----
From: Blake Hudson [mailto:bl...@ispn.net] 
Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2012 9:04 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: 172.0.0.0/12 has been Allocated

I wonder if ATT will be returning some of those /16 and /15 allocations it has 
in return for the /12 - http://whois.arin.net/rest/org/SIS-80/nets

How does one suddenly justify needing 1,000,000 more IP addresses (explosive 
expected growth in the next couple months?)

--Blake

Owen DeLong wrote the following on 8/23/2012 1:29 AM:
> AT&T should just be glad there was a /12 for them to get.
>
> That isn't going to be true for much longer.
>
> If you are counting on an IPv4 free pool to run your business next year, you 
> are making a bad bet.
>
> Owen
>
> On Aug 22, 2012, at 22:54 , "Otis L. Surratt, Jr." <o...@ocosa.com> wrote:
>
>> My apologies again, I saw it as 127.0.0.0. and not 172.0.0.0.
>>
>> I've been working long hours last couple nights. Yeah you are probably 
>> right, since they to pulled that one very close to RFC1918.
>>
>> http://bgp.potaroo.net/ipv4-stats/allocated-arin.html
>>
>>
>> I would hate to be AT&T for this IP allocation. Heck, I would simple push 
>> more IPv6 if I were them.
>>
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Dan White [mailto:dwh...@olp.net]
>> Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2012 12:37 AM
>> To: Otis L. Surratt, Jr.
>> Cc: nanog@nanog.org
>> Subject: Re: 172.0.0.0/12 has been Allocated
>>
>> You can do a whois search at arin.net to see the allocation.
>>
>> 172.0.0.0/12 is often confused with the private 172.16.0.0/12 address 
>> space, which I would consider a 'scraping the bottom of the barrel'
>> allocation.
>>
>> I also noticed a couple of subnets in that range showing up in the 
>> weekly Cidr reports, beginning in July.
>>
>> On 08/23/12 00:29 -0500, Otis L. Surratt, Jr. wrote:
>>> Dan,
>>>
>>> Can you provide a link to support this?
>>> If this is true, I wonder how this will work.
>>>
>>> Otis
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: Dan White [mailto:dwh...@olp.net]
>>> Sent: Thursday, August 23, 2012 12:24 AM
>>> To: nanog@nanog.org
>>> Subject: 172.0.0.0/12 has been Allocated
>>>
>>> 172.0.0.0-172.15.255.255 was allocated on 2012-08-20 to AT&T 
>>> Internet Services.
>> --
>> Dan White
>


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