On 19 Jul 2019, at 11:46 AM, Tom Beecher 
<beec...@beecher.cc<mailto:beec...@beecher.cc>> wrote:

Understood on specifics. But can you comment on the general ARIN policy on the 
topic? My understanding was that once a legacy resource was transferred , it 
was permanently removed as a legacy resource.

As noted earlier, general ARIN policy is as follows -

Those who received IPv4 address blocks by InterNIC (or its predecessors) prior 
to the inception of ARIN on 22 December 1997 are legacy resource holders, and 
continue to receive those same registry services for those blocks (Whois, 
reverse DNS, ability to update) without any need for an agreement with ARIN.  
This has been provided without any fee to the original registrants (or their 
legal successors) as recognition of their contributions to the early Internet.

Some legacy resource holders opt to sign a “legacy registration services 
agreement” by which ARIN provides specific and well-defined legal rights to the 
registrant – this is the same RSA as other ARIN customers, but ARIN caps the 
total annual maintenance fees that are incurred by legacy resource holders.  An 
RSA is also required to receive services that the community has funded the 
developed since ARIN’s inception, such as resource certification services.


Thanks!
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers

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