There is alot of mystery and bad faith contrary to what the internet community 
expected from address management for best interest of everyone.

 

Noah

 

 

There is no mystery and there is no bad faith, but this distribution mechanism 
was not anticipated by those who designed the free-pool distribution method.  
Yes, it is not what was expected by earlier policymakers.

But they didn’t live in an era with no meaningful free pools. Just about nobody 
returns addresses they don’t need for future distribution to those in need. 
Those days are gone, and really these lucky incumbents with un-needed addresses 
are an indictment of the policies of those days, which turned out to be 
inefficient and without incentive for return of addresses. We tried it, it 
didn’t work. 

 

We are in a new time, a fraught time, with some free pools still out there but 
most addresses are distributed through financial transfers and leases. We can 
take the ostrich approach, put our heads in the sand and ignore things. But I 
think it would be better to have clarity. I can’t foresee exactly what problems 
may arise by having this novel distribution system grow without policy, but I 
think there will be problems, and at lease this proposal provides a financial 
incentive for lessors to accurately register assignments which is currently 
lacking.

 

Whether this policy passes or not isn’t terribly important to those engaged in 
leasing, because there are few barriers to engaging in leasing. If you can’t 
justify address purchases in ARIN, just buy addresses in RIPE. If you already 
have ARIN addresses, just keep leasing them out.  This means that the only 
lessors in the market are incumbent Ipv4 owners, and these lessors often lack 
the skills required, which are usually quite different from the core business 
of the Ipv4 owner.  This helps miscreants in the lease market take advantage of 
the Ipv4 owners.

 

Regards,
Mike

 

 

 

 

 

 

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