On Thu, Nov 06, 2025 at 09:42:04AM -0500, jordi.palet--- via address-policy-wg wrote: Hi Jordi,
Hi Piotr, all, (and responding to several others as the points are basically the same)
If I recall correctly the data of rejected requests was provided a year ago by the NCC and was in our slides for the first version of the proposal.
Thank you for this reminder. I assume you are referring to this presentation [1]. Unfortunately, I was unable to find any email containing this data. Based on this, I found that from January 2023 to October 2024 (my understanding of the sentence), NCC "closed 331 IPv6 additional allocation tickets and extended 129 IPv6 allocations." That means 202 tickets were closed without such extension. Later on the same slide, there is information that "Some people request an additional allocation, we tell them more about how they can use their existing one, and they never reply. _This happens often._". I assume [2] that "often" means 50% of the time. That lowers the number to 101 tickets closed without extension in the 22-month period, which means around 55 per year. An important note is that other major reasons for closing the tickets without such an extension were not mentioned in the presentation. I leave the interpretation of this data to anyone interested.
However, I don???t think this should be taken as the ???only real data??? (and consequently % calculated by Nick are not good - we will not have good data unless every member comes and say if they will have wanted a shorter prefix).
I beg to differ. First of all, we have some real data that allows us to make estimates. Secondly, probing the entire population is not the only way to obtain "good data" for some definition of good. [1] https://ripe89.ripe.net/wp-content/uploads/presentations/80-2024-02-RIPE-89-... [2] As a non-native speaker who doesn't want to be biased, I asked AI to rank commonly used frequency adverbs/phrases in British English, along with approximate probabilities indicating how often the events occur. "Often" was assigned 50%-70%. I decided to use 50%. With 70%, the numbers are 60 and 33, respectively. Best, Piotr -- Piotr Strzyżewski