On 10 Dec 2021, at 5:00 PM, John Gilmore <g...@toad.com<mailto:g...@toad.com>> 
wrote:
...
Owen, the root of your problem is that you signed an LRSA with ARIN,
rather than keeping your legacy resources un-tainted by an ARIN contract
that deliberately reduced your rights

Signing a contract with ARIN certainly clarifies and makes specific the rights 
involved, but it is not possible to say “reduces” with any certainty as the 
existing rights are rather unclear without a specific statement of what rights 
were granted at the time.   Alas, issuance of number resources in the early 
days did not make the rights or associated obligations clear.   Some legacy 
resource holders find entering into an RSA with ARIN to be quite useful and 
others prefer not to – that choice is up to them, and is not required as the 
the ARIN Board of Trustees has directed that ARIN continue to provide the same 
basic registration services available at our formation to all legacy resource 
holders without fee or contract.

The short-term contract for the transfer honors and retains the legacy
status of those resources: that you own them, not the ARIN fiction that
an RIR now controls them and will steal them from you if you stop paying
them annually.

For organizations that do enter into a registration agreement with ARIN, there 
are indeed obligations (such as payment of registry fees) that are quite real 
but also benefits such as the ability to obtain new services funded by such 
fees and participation in the governance of ARIN.  As noted above - folks can 
enter into an agreement (or not) as they deem best.  Note one of the other 
advantages of the upcoming change to ARIN’s fee structure is that it will also 
open up ARIN membership and voting to all contracted registry customers with 
IPv4 or IPv6 number resources – rather than just those previously deemed ISPs – 
so those who do enter into a RSA and choose to participate in ARIN governance 
will have the equal ability to vote for the Board and set ARIN’s practices with 
regard to legacy resource holders.

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers

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