John,

 

I think we are in violent agreement here, other than the ARIN membership is the 
wrong venue (not broad enough to encompass the appropriate community) for the 
base statement that SWIP data  must exist for a routing entry. If the 
appropriately broad community established that BCP; a policy enforceable by 
ARIN staff would be “complies with community established BCP’s related to 
routing”.  

 

The only problem I have with the general braindead conservation mindset that 
says a /48 is non-consumer, and must be SWIPed while longer values would be 
only consumer and therefore exempt. As far as it goes, if a consumer convinced 
the ISP they had a technical need for a /36, that should be exempt based on 
consumer protection. Length has nothing to do with it. Identifiable routing 
slot contact info is the “need” here, so anything that is not broken out 
doesn’t “need” SWIP data. That said, this whole paragraph, and most of the 
current discussion belongs in another venue.

 

Tony

 

 

From: John Curran [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, July 17, 2017 12:25 PM
To: Tony Hain
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2017-5: Equalization of Assignment 
Registration requirements between IPv4 and IPv6

 

On 17 Jul 2017, at 11:20 AM, Tony Hain <[email protected]> wrote:

 

John,

 

So you are OK with a policy that says ARIN is required to revoke address space 
if other ISP’s choose to accept it into the routing table, but there is no SWIP 
for it? To me that says you are making a statement about “how things are 
routed” by requiring a database entry before it gets accepted into routing.

 

I have no problem with a BCP to the effect that the data SHOULD exist, but as a 
policy this has ARIN stomping right on the line it claims to avoid.

 

Tony - 

 

ARIN number resource policy must be germane to administration of the registry;

i.e. if you want a policy that says an address block will only be issued for a 
certain

reason (and that reason includes some routing characteristic, such as 
multihoming)

then ARIN will have parties represent that they intend to use in accordance with

that requirement, and will investigate representations that appear to be 
fraudulent.

 

For example, a policy that states that "IPv6 blocks will have SWIP performed 
for any

sub-delegations which are going to be individually announced by the ISP" would 
be 

a policy which is enforceable, since the ISP is representing that they’ll do 
“X" under 

certain circumstances, and it’s trivial to revoke if they fail to follow 
through and we 

receive a fraud report from the community calling attention to that fraud. 

 

Just remember, any characteristic or behavior that you intend to promulgate in 
this

manner effectively effective defines or extends the scope of ARIN’s mission, so 
it’s 

worth being very cautious and very certain before proposing such…   The fact 
that 

parties need IP address space mean that they have little effective remedy to 
the 

implications of community-developed number policy, and so requirements that 
aren’t 

directly and clearly related to ARIN’s mission (e.g. “requester agrees that 
they will 

put a statute of ARIN’s CEO in their lobby within 12 months of issuance”) are 
likely

to be found out of scope by ARIN’s Board of Trustees...

 

Thanks!

/John

 

John Curran

President and CEO

American Registry of Internet Numbers

 

 

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