Hi Matthew,

 

I’m not sure I’ve succeded to explain it in previous emails.

The requirement for the LACNIC policies about majority of usage *in the region* 
of the resources provided has been there for many years. I’m almost sure than 
since day 1, but will need to dig into older versions of the policy manual to 
check that.

The *text* was only using the work “mayoría”, but the interpretation when 
ensuring policy compliance, was following that definition of “mayoria”, which 
is more than 50%. My policy proposal, was “cleaning” and “clarifiying” text 
here and there. For example, there were some text that clearly apply to IPv4 
and IPv6, and was only in the IPv4 section, etc. The policy proposal also did a 
lot of major changes for the recovery of uncompliant addressing space by 
ensuring that LACNIC setup periodic and automatic policy compliance checks.

So: the “>50%” was not a “change”, was just making explicit the actual 
practice, and during the discussion of the proposal, we made sure in the 
mailing list that everybody agree with that clarification of the *existing* 
interpretation. Nobody, absolutely nobody, objected or said “I don’t read it 
that way”. In fact, I asked if the people prefers to use some “other %”, or 
completely delete it or whatever.

I don’t have the exact details of the case that Ron discovered in Belize, 
because, of course, most of the details are under NDA between the resourse 
holder and LACNIC, private documents, etc., etc. So I’m not sure if “initially” 
the resource holder was really having the “majority” of the resources operated 
in Belize or some other place in the region and then they “forgot” that they 
need to follow the policy (as said, the policy has not changed in that sense). 
My guess is that they provided false information to LACNIC “yes we have the 
majority of the operation in the region”, and the RIR trusted the provided 
documents, but is only my guess.

I fully see your point, however *every ISP/LIR needs to follow the policies in 
every RIR where they have resources*. Policy changes may require changes in 
their operation, and if they don’t agree, *this is the reason* they MUST 
participate in policy discussions, to be able to defend their position.

This is *nothing new*! Is part of the job of the ISPs/LIRs, to ensure that they 
follow the policy discussions, the same way as citizens follow law development 
because changes in law (new taxes, etc.), can change their compliance with law. 
Is not about retroactivity, is about every one of us developing the “laws” and 
justify why something can’t be changed.

The solution to those that don’t want to follow (even if is part of their 
“job”) the policy development, is to have warnings when there is a policy 
change that affects them. In fact I’ve included that in a policy proposal in 
AFRINIC 
(https://www.afrinic.net/policy/proposals/2020-gen-001-d1?lang=en-GB#proposal), 
by means of a dash-board. This could be done also by other RIRs as part of 
their “operational” terms in the customers accounts (such in “mylacnic” in the 
case of LACNIC), etc., and in fact it was the main intent of my policy proposal.

As said, remember that this has been not changed, just added a clarification 
based on the existing understanding of the previuos text. LACNIC will not have 
provided to this resource-holder in 2013 the resources if they didn’t had 
indicated that the majority (over 50%) of those resrouces aren’t being operated 
in the region.

I found and older archived version of the policy manual from 2013 (in Spanish):

https://www.lacnic.net/innovaportal/file/543/1/manual-politicas-sp-2.0.pdf

In section 1.11, has exactly the same text:

“Los recursos de numeración de Internet bajo la custodia de LACNIC se deben 
distribuir a organizaciones legalmente establecidas en su región de servicio 
[COBERTURA] y para atender mayoritariamente redes y servicios que operan en 
dicha región.”

 

 

 

El 25/1/21 0:15, "Matthew Petach" <mpet...@netflight.com> escribió:

 

 

 

On Sun, Jan 24, 2021 at 4:22 AM JORDI PALET MARTINEZ via NANOG 
<nanog@nanog.org> wrote:

[...] 

So, you end up with 2-3 RIRs allocations, not 5. And the real situation is that 
3 out of 5 RIRs communities, decided to be more relaxed on that requirement, so 
you don’t need actually more than 1 or may be 2 allocations. Of course, we are 
talking “in the past” because if we are referring to IPv4 addresses, you 
actually have a different problem trying to get them from the RIRs.

 

Hi Jordi,

 

I've adjusted the subject line to reflect the real thrust of this discussion.

 

You're right--if we're trying to get "new" allocations of IPv4 addresses, we've 
got bigger problems to solve.

 

But when it comes to IPv6 address blocks and ASNs, these questions are still 
very relevant.

 

And, going back to the original article that spawned the parent thread, the 
problem wasn't about companies requesting *new* blocks, it was about the usage 
of old, already granted blocks that were now being reclaimed.

 

Historically, ISPs have focused on ensuring their usage of IP space reflected 
the then-current requirements at the time the blocks were requested.  This 
action by Ron, well-intentioned as it is, raises a new challenge for ISPs:  
network numbering decisions that were made in the past, which may have been 
done perfectly according to the guidelines in place at the time the blocks were 
assigned, may later on violate *newly added* requirements put in place by RIRs. 
 How many global networks allocate manpower and time cycles to potentially 
renumbering portions of their network each time a new policy is put in place at 
an RIR that makes previously-conforming addressing topologies no longer 
conforming?  Historically, once addresses were granted by an RIR, and the 
exercise of ensuring all the requirements were met, and the addresses were in 
place, that was it; nobody went back every time a new policy was put in place 
and re-audited the network to ensure it was still in compliance, and did the 
work to bring it back into compliance if the new policy created violations, 
because the RIRs generally didn't go back to see if new policies had been 
retroactively applied to all member networks.

 

Ron's actions have now put every network on notice; it wasn't good enough to be 
in compliance at the time you obtained your address space, you MUST re-audit 
your network any time new policies are put into force by the RIR in a region in 
which you do business, or your address space may be revoked due to retroactive 
application of the new policy against addresses you have already put into use.

 

This is a bigger deal that I think many people on the list are first grasping.

 

We grow up accustomed to the notion that laws can't be applied retroactively.  
If you smoked pot last year, before it was criminalized, they can't arrest you 
this year after a new law was passed for smoking it before the law was passed.  

 

In the DDoS-guard case, the address blocks in question seem to have been 
granted by LACNIC nearly a decade ago back in 2013, under whatever policies 
were in force at the time.  But they're being revoked and reclaimed based on 
the policies that are in place *now*, nearly a decade later.

 

It sends a very clear message--it's not enough to be in compliance with 
policies at the time the addresses are granted.  New policies can and will be 
applied retroactively, so decisions you made in the past that were valid and 
legal, may now be invalid, and subject you to revocation.  It's bad enough when 
it's your own infrastructure that you have some control over that you may need 
to re-number; woe to you if you assign address blocks to *customers* in a 
manner that was valid under previous policy, but is no longer valid under new 
policies--you get to go back to your customers, and explain that *they* now 
have to redo their network addressing so that it is in compliance, in order for 
*you* to be in compliance with the new policies.  Otherwise, you can *all* end 
up losing your IP address blocks.

 

So--while I think Ron's actions were done with the best of intentions, I think 
the fallout from those actions should be sending a chill down the spine of 
every network operator who obtained address blocks under policies in place a 
decade ago that hasn't gone back and re-audited their network for compliance 
after ever subsequent policy decision.

 

What if one of *your* customers falls into Ron's spotlight; is the rest of your 
network still in compliance with every RIR policy passed in the years or 
decades since the addresses were allocated?  Are you at risk of having chunks 
of your IP space revoked?

 

I know this sets a precedent *I* find frightening.  If it isn't scaring you, 
either you don't run a network, or I suspect you haven't thought all the way 
through how it could impact your business at some unforeseen point in the 
future, when a future policy is passed.  :/

 

Thanks!

 

Matt

 

 



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