On Jan 13, 2009, at 8:26 AM, Bill Woodcock wrote:
     On Tue, 13 Jan 2009, Graham Beneke wrote:
IPv6 Allocations to Non-Profit Networks
----------
Many community and non-profit networks exist on the African continent
and around the world...  Many of these organizations provide the
services free of charge and do not have any kind of revenue stream.

I strongly support this policy.

So, you'd be happy for (say) the Gates Foundation to not pay AfriNIC while a small two person commercial ISP serving some rural area in the bush would be subject to full freight?

Also, in my (perhaps dated) experience, few countries had a useful definition of "non-profit corporation". This is why, for example, APNIC is actually a for-profit company, at least according to the Australian government. If this remains the case, this policy would appear to disadvantage ISPs in countries without a non-profit legal/ tax status.

I'm curious: what percentage of the total cost of doing business for ISPs in Africa is the annual AfriNIC fees relative to the cost of connectivity, staff, rent, electricity, etc.?

This is the model under which the Internet was initially built...

No it isn't. The model under which the Internet was build (at least in the context of address registration) was government subsidies. Before the RIRs existed, the US taxpayers (via the US government) paid for _all_ address registration services. That time is long past and we probably don't want to try to revisit it.

To be clear, this policy is asking one set of AfriNIC members (for- profits) to subsidize another set ("non-profits", whatever that means). Long ago, APNIC looked at the same policy and decided against it since (a) it was felt yearly APNIC fees were such a tiny proportion of the total cost of providing Internet service in the AP region that it was nonsensical to think that waiving those fees would have a significant impact on the growth of the Internet in the region and (b) the APNIC executive council had mechanisms by which fees could be waived. Whether or not these considerations are relevant for the African region at this point in time is obviously something you all will need to determine.

Regards,
-drc



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