On Tue, Dec 7, 2021 at 3:56 PM Gert Doering <gert@space.net> wrote:
Hi,
On Tue, Dec 07, 2021 at 02:29:15PM +0000, Erik Bais wrote:
As WG chairs we would like to see the position of the WG on the topic and what could be seen as a possible solution.
As a member of the WG, I do share the sentiment that the intent of the "IPv4 runout" policies have been "ensure that late comers to the game can have a bit of IPv4 space, to number their IPv6 translators", and not "grab some space for free, and sell it for more money elsewhere".
I do not think this can be fixed on the AGM level ("one legal entity can only have one LIR account") - we've been there, in the rush to /22s, and all it does it "make people hide behind shell companies", so in the end, the address space goes out anyway, but registry quality suffers.
Trying to make the NCC require even more paperwork isn't going to stop those that want to game the system, but will impact everyone else by making the NCC more annoying to deal with.
My suggestion would be along the lines what was proposed on the APWG meeting already - earmark these /24s as non-transferrable, ever.
I would definitely support that, but...
Consequences:
- there is no more financial incentive to "get one cheap, sell it expensive"
- if you need space to run your business, this is exactly what it is there for - you can still sell your business (with the /24), you just need to keep the LIR account. But that's as with other business assets.
- if you want to merge multiple LIR accounts, all having their own /24 - then you need to keep around these accounts, or return some of the /24s. - corrolary: if you use these /24s to number your IPv6 translators, then renumbering this translator into "your other /24" is actually not very hard. - corrolary2: If you use the /24s to directly number your customers, you missed the boat already (wearing my RIPE unicorn t-shirt today).
If the goal of the WG is to stop some small number of LIRs abusing the system, make it non-transferrable, but really never, return to the pool. Any "if" will just change the game for those who abuse the system. Hardline only works if we make an assumption that being an LIR is more expensive than "renting" 256 v4 addresses on the market. I don't know how long this will hold on. As it was mentioned already at APWG, I think ARIN approach is more elegant, 5 years is a reasonable number these days. This could be revised to further extend the hold time if needed, rather than the membership fee. Yes, abuse will go on, but less interesting short term and at least with the prospect of proper registration. v6 stats are depressing, v4 is not going away, we are just inflating the prices and further skewing the DB accuracy. AJ Wolski