Hi Fernando,

 

You keep saying this proposal doesn’t have community support and that is plain 
wrong, and getting more wrong daily.

It had and has community support, and it had majority AC support, just not 
supermajority.

So your arguments about lack of community support are not applicable, as 
apparently this decision came down to a few people on the AC at the time.

 

Maybe your default position for new posters is they probably visited a website 
for free beers and should be grilled.

Have  you seen the signatures and job titles being posted, even including ARIN 
membership numbers?

Do you have an ARIN membership number? 

Can we see your papers to ensure  you aren’t getting free beer and can be 
“dismissed”?

Do you see how objectionable this stuff is, and where it can lead?

 

None of that matters, as we are not judging this policy by motivations nor by 
popularity.

But the petition process demands numbers, pure numbers, and postings in support 
of the petition don’t require the same depth of arguments in support of the 
underlying proposal anyway, as you yourself pointed out! The process virtually 
requires the sort of postings we are seeing, or does the number 25 require 25 
separate reasoning discussions?

 

The Trustees have heard the arguments by now I am sure, and the support of the 
petition must be at or near the required 25 by now.

Unsolicited advice to new posters on how to run their networks and the need to 
use IPv6 are a waste of time, and are the correct way to keep the community 
tiny.

 

Regards,
Mike

PS If we have reached 25 petitions, please let us know. Somebody must be 
counting. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From: ARIN-PPML <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Fernando Frediani
Sent: Friday, January 15, 2021 3:34 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2020-2: Grandfathering of 
Organizations Removed from Waitlist by Implementation of ARIN-2019-16

 

Yes we are, mainly when there are tentatives to push something that hasn't been 
broadly accepted by the community as many other proposals that didn't progress.

If a proposal doesn't reach consensus is probably because it didn't resolve all 
the possible issues it had during the discussion period regardless of how many 
people supported it.

And by the way: there are absolutely nothing wrong in dismissing supports when 
they have no substantial justifications to contribute to resolve the opened 
issues. That's what is evaluated by the AC.
Otherwise we may end up having supports to proposals "because once the person 
visited the author's company and they give free beers to visitors".

Process keep being bottom-up, everyone is free to write whatever opinion they 
have and others that don't agree with it or don't consider that as something 
that resolves opened issues have also the right to contradict them. 

Fernando

On 15/01/2021 17:21, Mike Burns wrote:

Count me as embarrassed at the treatment of new posters on this list.

Demeaned as recipients of payments for expressing their opinion, mocked for 
offering support without establishing bona fides.

Dismissed because no reasoning is provided in support of their opinions.

And finally attacked when they do.

 

I hope the Trustees who will make this decision are aware of the importance of 
bottom-up, stakeholder governance, and realize these numerous expressions of 
support might be the first steps of these posters towards the kind of ongoing 
community participation we claim to value. 

 

Aren’t we all sick of the same voices?

 

Regards,
Mike Burns

 

PS ARIN does not require resource holders use NAT, much less CGNAT. 

If you feel that should be a requirement, write a policy proposal.

 

 

 

 

From: ARIN-PPML  <mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]> On Behalf Of Robert Clarke
Sent: Friday, January 15, 2021 2:55 PM
To: Jay Wendelin  <mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2020-2: Grandfathering of 
Organizations Removed from Waitlist by Implementation of ARIN-2019-16

 

Isn't this like saying "please give me free land so I can lease it onto schools 
and other noble public institutions?" 

 

I don't feel like this argument has weight nor does your business take priority 
over the actual non profit businesses that won't get allocations because of 
this policy.

 

Regards,

 

Robert






On Jan 15, 2021, at 8:29 AM, Jay Wendelin <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

 

I support this petition, I have many Public School Clients that rely on their 
ISP’s to manage and offer IP address. 

 





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