Hi Lu,

The fact that Larus is attempting to go after the RIPE NCC, alleging 
anti-competitive behaviour, demonstrates that Larus has a fundamental 
misunderstanding around how the RIR system works. IP address space is portable 
between RIRs so long as the transfer request is compliant with both the losing 
and gaining RIR’s policies. This addresses the first point under your “Summary 
of Key Rights and Their Importance”. If anything, the RIPE NCC is one of the 
most accommodating with fees fixed at €1,800 per LIR, regardless of the space 
of IP space held by an LIR.

Secondly, while the five RIRs do acknowledge that there is a secondary market 
for the transfer and utilisation of INRs, they are not obligated to ensure 
their systems will support the commercial transactions behind the transfer of 
the rights to INRs. To be clear – members do not own their INRs, rather they 
are granted an exclusive use rights license to the INRs so long as the member 
LIR is current with their membership fees. RIRs do not interfere with 
transfers, while they may prevent transfers for a number of reasons (such as 
the INRs being delegated within a certain period of time, fees not being 
current, etc.) this is not to be construed as interference.

All members do have equal access to RIR services. The only ones that may not 
are those who hold legacy space delegated prior to the formation of the RIR 
system. The only services they may not have access to (by choice for at least 
one large global T1 transit provider) are services such as RPKI.

On the topic of Due Process when it comes to sanctions against members in 
certain economies, if an RIR is required by law to revoke resources or close a 
member’s account, they must take this action. For example, if the Dutch 
government passes a law that says that organisations based in The Netherlands 
can no longer provide goods or services to an organisation located within an 
economy that is on an OFAC sanctions list, then I believe that this would mean 
that the RIPE NCC would need to revoke resources and/or close a member’s 
account. This wouldn’t be RIR policy; this would be the law.

To the best of my knowledge, ARIN, RIPE NCC, APNIC and LACNIC all have both 
formal and informal internal dispute resolution processes which a member has 
access to if they do not agree with a decision that has been made or believe 
something should have been done differently. Unfortunately, I’m not sure of 
what the current situation is with IDR processes within AFRINIC due to their 
circumstances at the moment.

And finally, on the topic of transparency and accountability, I am aware that 
at least APNIC is fully transparent in their operations, in that they publicly 
publish delegation records, their policies are open for all to see, and they 
publish their corporate governance documents all on their website. I can’t 
speak to the other RIRs as I haven’t done a deep-dive yet into them, however, I 
am confident that they would be very similar.

To allege that the RIPE NCC (or any other RIR for that matter) is engaging in 
anti-competitive behaviour or that its undertakings/activities are similar in 
nature to that of a cartel arrangement is nothing short of abhorrent. And to 
consider legal action for rejecting a sponsorship offer is disrespectful toward 
the RIR community. I’m confident in saying that if the RIPE NCC (or any other 
RIR) had the option to choose between funding from Larus or another 
organisation, it is quite clear based on the reaction at the RIPE 90 General 
Meeting what the decision would be…

Regards,
Christopher Hawker

From: Lu Heng <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, 16 May 2025 3:54 PM
To: Alex de Joode <[email protected]>
Cc: RIPE List <[email protected]>
Subject: [ripe-list] Re: Antitrust investigation into RIPE NCC may expose 
members to tens of millions in potential legal costs for defending actions that 
violate members’ rights.

Hi Alex:


The assertion that I have manufactured this issue, rather than acknowledging it 
as a serious matter requiring attention from RIPE NCC and the RIPE community, 
represents a fundamentally flawed approach. Nonetheless, in the interest of 
complete community transparency, I will address your question below.

--
Kind regards.
Lu


On Thu, May 15, 2025 at 16:06 Alex de Joode 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Lu,

Thanks for your entertaining performance at the GM.

I'm grateful for the mail below. Please allow me to share a few comments with 
you and the community:

selection of lawfirm: Loyens & Loeff is a well regarded tax law firm, however 
their Competition Law department is only Band3/4 on the Chambers Ranking so 
would it be correct for me to surmise the top-tier Competition Law firms in The 
Netherlands declined to respresent you (for instance due to lack of substance 
of your claim)?

Attacking the person not the merit?

Also your assumption is simply factually wrong, no law firm have declined the 
case due to lack of substance.

But Full transparency from my internal legal team send to me as I equire, and 
yes, we had “higher band” law firm actually sent the letter to RIPE, but we 
find Loyens & Loeff simply more capable:


“Dear Mr. Lu,



1) Respectfully, the band rankings of law firms, such as those by 
Chambers&Partners or Legal 500, are not entirely objective. While these 
platforms claim that their rankings are free, nominations often require a fee, 
including in Malaysia. In practice, they function more as branding/marketing 
tools rather than genuine merit-based assessments.



For example, the first lawyer we spoke with, and sent our first letter to RIPE 
NCC, Bird&Bird Law firm, is ranked Band 2 for EU Competition by Legal 500. 
However, based on our experience, we found her approach lacking in both 
capability and ability in handling instructions.



2) Given that RIPE is based in the Netherlands, it is most appropriate to 
engage a Dutch law firm, both for jurisdictional and geographical reasons for 
the summons to issue. This ensures that we can seek remedies not just under EU 
competition law, but also under Dutch tort law, where relevant.



In this context, Marc and the firm Loyens & Loeff were mentioned a couple times 
when we are sourcing. He was recommended by many other EU lawyers in their 
emails as working partners in the Amsterdam when realising RIPE is in 
Amsterdam.  (screenshots below)



Ultimately, the quality of service depends more on the individual lawyer than 
the firm.

(i) Marc has showed expertise and experience, as well as a willingness to 
understand and accommodate our concerns.

(ii) Hence, Marc can be said to be truly and well recognised in the eyes of 
other EU lawyers and he has the capability to sort this out.



Hope that explains.”




internally incoherent argumentation: you state all 5 RIR's fall under the EU 
Competition Law, however if that is the case how can RIPE have a monopoly 
(there is choice then)?


We will publish full review report in due course for community to view.

For clarity, below are the member rights I previously shared in the Telegram 
group to avoid anti trust claims—particularly since the RIPE Board appears to 
dismiss the legitimacy of those discussions, labeling them as “unofficial.”


Summary of Key Rights and Their Importance:
• Portability of IP Addresses: Members can move their IP allocations to another 
provider or registry if needed, similar to phone number portability. This 
prevents lock-in and ensures RIRs cannot trap members in an unfair situation, 
addressing monopoly concerns directly.
• Transferability and Ownership Rights: Members may transfer or sell addresses 
under transparent rules. This creates an open market for IP resources and 
avoids RIR over-control. Members retain value in their addresses, and supply 
can meet demand without RIR interference, reducing incentives for antitrust 
claims .
• Equal Access (Non-Discrimination): All qualifying members receive services on 
equal terms – no favoritism or unjust exclusions. This upholds neutrality. With 
open membership and uniform policies, RIRs demonstrate they aren’t picking 
winners or reinforcing dominance of any one player.
• Due Process in Sanctions: Clear procedures for any resource revocation or 
membership closure, including notice and chance to remedy. This fairness in 
enforcement shows that any resource reclamation is policy-driven, not 
arbitrary. It prevents scenarios where a member feels wronged without being 
heard, which often lead to lawsuits.
• Appeal and Conflict Resolution: Mechanisms (arbitration, appeals committee) 
for independent review of RIR decisions. This gives members confidence that 
they can challenge decisions internally. It helps resolve disputes amicably and 
demonstrates accountability, making regulatory intervention less necessary.
• Transparency and Accountability: Open publication of registries, policies, 
and decision-making processes, plus member governance of the RIR. This sunlight 
deters anti-competitive behavior and ensures community oversight. An RIR that 
is transparent about its actions is far less likely to be accused of 
conspiratorial or abusive conduct.





As you are well aware law firms  add loads of disclaimers to their opinions, 
but these are not listed below. Would you be so kind as the share the whole 
opinion, so the wider community can also see the disclaimers the law firm wrote 
in the opinion and come to a better appriciation of your claim?

Nope, what I posted is the entirety of their email, with header I omitted in 
which I am going to share here:


Dear all,



As agreed yesterday, please find below some speaker notes that could be used by 
Mr. Lu at the RIPE NCC conference. Please have a close look if the proposed 
argumentation correctly reflects your thoughts as to why the decisions of RIPE 
NCC may restrict competition.



Since we have successfully completed the KYC process, please feel free to refer 
to the name of Loyens & Loeff as your advisors in this matter. Please note, 
however, that our comments are still of a rather general nature at this stage 
because we have not yet been able to do any profound research or in depth 
analysis on this matter.




Thanks,
Alex
​--
IDGARA | Alex de Joode | [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | +31651108221

On Thu, 15-05-2025 8h 21min, Lu Heng 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi colleagues:



Below are finding from law firm:



RIPE NCC qualifies as an association of undertakings in the sense of EU 
competition law. In view of its activities, such as the allocation and 
registration of Internet number resources, RIPE NCC itself may also be regarded 
as an undertaking under EU competition law. The same applies to the other four 
regional Internet registries (RIRs). It follows that RIPE NCC is obliged to act 
in line with EU competition law:



  *   as an association of undertakings, it must comply with Article 101(1) of 
the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), which prohibits 
decisions by associations of undertakings which may affect trade between Member 
States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or 
distortion of competition within the internal market of the European Union. 
This is also known as the cartel prohibition;
  *   as an undertaking, it must comply with Article 101(1) TFEU, which also 
prohibits agreements between undertakings which may affect trade between Member 
States and which have as their object or effect the prevention, restriction or 
distortion of competition within the internal market of the European Union;
  *   as an undertaking, it must also comply with Article 102 TFEU, which 
prohibits the abuse of a dominant position within the internal market of the 
European Union.



As regards the applicability of this Article 102 TFEU to RIPE NCC, it is 
important to note that the current standard service agreement of RIPE NCC, as 
well as the proposed new model, in conjunction with the RIR Governance 
Document, grants RIPE NCC complete territorial exclusivity to allocate and 
register Internet number resources in its own service area. Consequently, RIPE 
NCC holds a monopoly in its service area and should therefore be considered 
subject to the prohibition of abuse of a dominant position as set out in 
Article 102 TFEU.



We have been advised by Loyens & Loeff that several restrictions in the current 
and the proposed service agreement of RIPE NCC and the RIR Governance Document 
may raise concerns under EU competition law, and could be contrary to the 
cartel prohibition and/or the prohibition of abuse of dominance.



Firstly, the allocation of exclusive territorial service areas to each of the 
five RIRs could possibly be interpreted as a market sharing agreement. In 
general, market sharing agreements are considered to constitute serious hard 
core infringements of the cartel prohibition. These types of agreements only 
very rarely escape the applicability of the cartel prohibition, and usually do 
not qualify for an exemption from this prohibition.



In addition, the current and the proposed service agreement of RIPE NCC 
excludes the portability of rights to number resources. The fact that these 
rights are not portable is likely to restrict potential competitors of RIPE NCC 
(both existing RIRs as well as companies desirous to become RIRs) to offer 
their services to users in RIPE NCC’s service area. Therefore, to the extent 
that the current and proposed regime does not allow for number portability, 
this could be regarded as a decision of an association of undertakings which is 
contrary to the cartel prohibition, as well as an abuse of RIPE NCC’s dominant 
position in its service area.



The consequences of an infringement of the cartel prohibition or of an abuse of 
a dominant position can be extremely severe. Perhaps most importantly:



  *   the European Commission may impose very high fines, which may go up to 
10% of the worldwide annual group turnover;
  *   parties that have suffered damages as a result of the infringement of EU 
competition law, may ask for compensation of these damages in civil court 
proceedings.



***



We hope the above is helpful. Happy to discuss.





--
Kind regards.
Lu
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