On 04/14/06 at 5:07pm +0200, Iljitsch van Beijnum <iljitsch@muada.com> wrote:
On 14-apr-2006, at 16:57, Scott Leibrand wrote:
60 voted in favor of moving forward with PI. 6 voted against.
Wow, 10 to 1. Amazing.
Even more amazing: 60 people who represent nobody but their own paycheck get to blow up the internet.
Did you participate in the process? Even if you can't justify travel to Montreal, the PPML is wide open. ARIN doesn't go solely by the vote in the room; they also consider whether there was consensus on the PPML.
Where is ICANN when you need it? This little experiment in playground democracy has to end before people get hurt.
I think the ARIN process is closer to the IETF's "rough consensus" process than to "democracy". If you think the PI policy ARIN passed will "blow up the internet", I would encourage you to participate in drafting policy proposals to help limit the impact of PI on the routing table. Bear in mind that we didn't approve an "IPv6 PI for everyone" policy precisely to avoid "blowing up the Internet": instead we only extended existing IPv4 policy to IPv6. As I've written before, I'm attempting to draft an ARIN policy proposal to ensure PI addresses are assigned in a regular fashion instead of the random chronological fashion we do now with IPv4. As you seem to support that, I would encourage you to help draft such a policy proposal and help get people to support it. -Scott P.S. I don't think we need quite so much cross-posting as this...