Re: [anti-abuse-wg] RIPE Charter
Dear Ronald, We would like to provide some information in response to the questions you have raised.
The "Publication date" on the "RIPE NCC Articles of Association (2013)” as presented at the URL above is "20 Jan 2014", but RIPE NCC, as a formal association under Dutch law has existed for far longer than that, correct? On what date did RIPE NCC first obtain legal existance under Dutch law?
The RIPE NCC was incorporated under Dutch Law on 12 November 1997, when the Articles of Association were deposited with the Amsterdam Chamber of Commerce. The original version of the Articles of Association can be found here: https://www.ripe.net/publications/docs/ripe-176 Since then, the Articles of Association have been updated several times — each time by a resolution that was approved by the General Meeting (GM). The RIPE NCC publishes the latest version of the Articles of Association and keeps a public archive of all previous versions. You can also find all relevant documents presented at each GM where amendments to the Articles of Association were discussed.
In the entire history of RIPE NCC, as a formal association under Dutch law, has there ever been any instance in which The Association has applied either Section 6.1(b) or Section 6.1(e) of the Articles of Association? If so, on how many separate occasions have such terminations occured? With respect to each such instance, if any, has The Association obeyed in full the stipulation, as to its own behavior contained in Section 10.5 of the Articles of Association?
In order for a natural or legal person to become member of the RIPE NCC, they need to sign the RIPE NCC Standard Service Agreement (Article 4). The Standard Service Agreement is a document approved by the GM that can be amended through further GM resolutions (Article 2.3). Accordingly, the termination of a membership is linked to the termination of a member's Standard Service Agreement (see Article 9.5). The Standard Service Agreement may be terminated in accordance with Article 9. This same article states that the particular reasons for termination and the procedures followed are defined in the RIPE NCC procedural document "Closure of Members, Deregistration of Internet Resources and Legacy Internet Resources”. You can find this here: https://www.ripe.net/publications/docs/ripe-640 The most common reason for termination of the Standard Service Agreement is due to non-payment of fees, liquidation or bankruptcy, or when a member ceases to exist for any reason. However, there is a smaller number of cases where the RIPE NCC has terminated Standard Service Agreement because the member: - Submitted fraudulent documents to the RIPE NCC - Did not comply with a RIPE NCC audit - Failed to submit recent proof of their existence (e.g. registration papers from the national authorities). As an association under Dutch Law, the RIPE NCC has to comply with sanctions imposed by the Netherlands and the EU that may restrict us from having a contractual relationship with a member. More information about this is available in the RIPE NCC procedural document "Due Diligence for the Quality of the RIPE NCC Registration Data”. The RIPE NCC has previously terminated the Standard Service Agreement of several parties that were listed in such sanctions. https://www.ripe.net/publications/docs/ripe-669 So far in 2016, around 300 memberships have been terminated for non-payment of fees, liquidation or bankruptcy, or because the member ceased to exist. Around four memberships have been terminated for one of these other reasons (submitting fraudulent documents, failure to comply with audits or failure to supply proof of existence). No memberships have been terminated this year due to sanctions. We would like to draw your attention to the RIPE NCC Report Form on our website. This provides a simple way to report fraudulent information supplied to the RIPE NCC or incorrect information in the RIPE Database, for example. We will investigate any reports we receive through the report form and take action if required. While we will don't report back the results of our investigations directly, we do provide some numbers in our Annual Report each year. In 2015, we received 319 reports through the form: - 131 were reported as incorrect data in the RIPE Database. 67 of these required further investigation by the RIPE NCC. - 180 cases were reported as policy violations, untruthful information or were related to bankruptcy. 143 of these cases turned out not to be policy violations, seven could not be followed up due to lack of information and five resulted in further inquiries. 25 did indeed concern policy violations, untruthful information, or bankruptcy. - Eight cases were not classified as abuse reports but were investigated nonetheless. You can find the report form here: https://www.ripe.net/report-form Kind regards, Athina Fragkouli Head of Legal RIPE NCC Date: Wed, 10 Aug 2016 12:27:04 -0700 From: "Ronald F. Guilmette" <rfg@tristatelogic.com> To: anti-abuse-wg@ripe.net Subject: Re: [anti-abuse-wg] RIPE Charter In message <57AB1227.1070100@iszt.hu>, Janos Zsako <zsako@iszt.hu> wrote:
No, but you can find the RIPE NCC's Articles of Association at https://www.ripe.net/publications/docs/ripe-602
Thank you! That document is most helpful.
RIPE does not have "authority" over RIPE NCC, it is the members. In many cases the RIPE community and the RIPE NCC membership overlap, but not always.
I have many questions. I hope nobody will mind. I will try to be brief. I'm still trying to understand. RIPE is *not* RIPE NCC and vise versa, correct? I mean they are two different things, legally speaking, yes? A person or legal entity could be a member of "RIPE" and yet not be a member of "RIPE NCC", correct? Conversely, could a person or legal entity be a member of "RIPE NCC" and yet _not_ be a member of "RIPE"? Is it correct also that only those persons and legal entities that are actually paying dues to RIPE NCC are members of RIPE NCC? The "Publication date" on the "RIPE NCC Articles of Association (2013)" as presented at the URL above is "20 Jan 2014", but RIPE NCC, as a formal association under Dutch law has existed for far longer than that, correct? On what date did RIPE NCC first obtain legal existance under Dutch law? In the entire history of RIPE NCC, as a formal association under Dutch law, has there ever been any instance in which The Association has applied either Section 6.1(b) or Section 6.1(e) of the Articles of Association? If so, on how many separate occasions have such terminations occured? With respect to each such instance, if any, has The Association obeyed in full the stipulation, as to its own behavior contained in Section 10.5 of the Articles of Association? Regards, rfg
Ms. Fragkouli, Thank you for providing the Anti-Abuse Working Group with numerical information relating to your department's processing of "complaints" (which I personally prefer to call "reports") during 2016 and 2015. Unfortunately, something seems to have been lost in translation, as my request made its way to you, and thus, the numbers you provided, although interesting, do not actually answer the questions that I was was interested in obtaining answers for, as I explain below. In message <5b6fca31-1033-7120-efb0-7d7e0eb604fe@ripe.net>, Athina Fragkouli <athina.fragkouli@ripe.net> wrote:
So far in 2016... Around four memberships have been terminated for one of these other reasons (submitting fraudulent documents, failure to comply with audits or failure to supply proof of existence).
Around four? Would it be possible for you to be a bit more specific?
In 2015, we received 319 reports through the form: - 131 were reported as incorrect data in the RIPE Database. 67 of these required further investigation by the RIPE NCC. - 180 cases were reported as policy violations, untruthful information or were related to bankruptcy. 143 of these cases turned out not to be policy violations, seven could not be followed up due to lack of information and five resulted in further inquiries. 25 did indeed concern policy violations, untruthful information, or bankruptcy. - Eight cases were not classified as abuse reports but were investigated nonetheless.
It is always wonderful to have concrete numbers to work with, except of course in cases where the numbers in question have more to do with irrelevancies (e.g. the price of tea in China, as we say here) than they have to do with the actual topic at hand. Ms. Fragkouli, I may perhaps be the only one, but I cannot help but notice that in and among all of the various figures you've quoted, authoritatively, above, there is no number which indicates -either- (a) the total number of cases in which RIPE NCC actually did take some action, i.e. -any- action, against any member in 2015 -or- (b) the specific number of cases in 2015 in which RIPE NCC took some action or actions against a member that was actually relevant to the interests and work of the Anti-Abuse Working Group specifically. (I don't believe that any of us here are really all that interested to know how many RIPE NCC members went bankrupt in 2015.) Perhaps I have only failed to read your comments clearly... and if so, I do apologize for that... but whereas I see that you have clearly said how you and your department -categorized- all of the 2015 reports you processed, I do not see any clear statement from you about how many actual -actions- against members were instituted in 2015. I would like to obtain that number, i.e. the number of actual 2015 actions, not counting financially-related ones. Ms. Fragkouli, would it perhaps be possible for the RIPE NCC staff to provide a number... both for calendar 2015 and also, perhaps, for prior years... that would accurately reflect the number of cases (e.g. in 2015 at least) where RIPE NCC actually -did- take the action of discontinuing the membership of a member for reasons -other than- the non-payment of fees or bankruptcy? To be sure we are clear, it is really only the total number of non- financial-related actual termination actions that are of interest here in the WG. If you could provide those numbers, that would be most helpful. I thank you in advance for your help and participation. Regards, rfg
Dear Ron, All your replies are so long, it makes me stop reading after the first paragraph. You got quite a few interesting things to say, but please try to say it short. I personally don't have time to read novels on mailing lists. Regards, Radu On 08/14/2016 11:02 AM, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
Ms. Fragkouli,
Thank you for providing the Anti-Abuse Working Group with numerical information relating to your department's processing of "complaints" (which I personally prefer to call "reports") during 2016 and 2015.
Unfortunately, something seems to have been lost in translation, as my request made its way to you, and thus, the numbers you provided, although interesting, do not actually answer the questions that I was was interested in obtaining answers for, as I explain below.
In message <5b6fca31-1033-7120-efb0-7d7e0eb604fe@ripe.net>, Athina Fragkouli <athina.fragkouli@ripe.net> wrote:
So far in 2016... Around four memberships have been terminated for one of these other reasons (submitting fraudulent documents, failure to comply with audits or failure to supply proof of existence). Around four? Would it be possible for you to be a bit more specific?
In 2015, we received 319 reports through the form: - 131 were reported as incorrect data in the RIPE Database. 67 of these required further investigation by the RIPE NCC. - 180 cases were reported as policy violations, untruthful information or were related to bankruptcy. 143 of these cases turned out not to be policy violations, seven could not be followed up due to lack of information and five resulted in further inquiries. 25 did indeed concern policy violations, untruthful information, or bankruptcy. - Eight cases were not classified as abuse reports but were investigated nonetheless. It is always wonderful to have concrete numbers to work with, except of course in cases where the numbers in question have more to do with irrelevancies (e.g. the price of tea in China, as we say here) than they have to do with the actual topic at hand.
Ms. Fragkouli, I may perhaps be the only one, but I cannot help but notice that in and among all of the various figures you've quoted, authoritatively, above, there is no number which indicates -either- (a) the total number of cases in which RIPE NCC actually did take some action, i.e. -any- action, against any member in 2015 -or- (b) the specific number of cases in 2015 in which RIPE NCC took some action or actions against a member that was actually relevant to the interests and work of the Anti-Abuse Working Group specifically. (I don't believe that any of us here are really all that interested to know how many RIPE NCC members went bankrupt in 2015.)
Perhaps I have only failed to read your comments clearly... and if so, I do apologize for that... but whereas I see that you have clearly said how you and your department -categorized- all of the 2015 reports you processed, I do not see any clear statement from you about how many actual -actions- against members were instituted in 2015.
I would like to obtain that number, i.e. the number of actual 2015 actions, not counting financially-related ones.
Ms. Fragkouli, would it perhaps be possible for the RIPE NCC staff to provide a number... both for calendar 2015 and also, perhaps, for prior years... that would accurately reflect the number of cases (e.g. in 2015 at least) where RIPE NCC actually -did- take the action of discontinuing the membership of a member for reasons -other than- the non-payment of fees or bankruptcy?
To be sure we are clear, it is really only the total number of non- financial-related actual termination actions that are of interest here in the WG.
If you could provide those numbers, that would be most helpful.
I thank you in advance for your help and participation.
Regards, rfg
Hi Ronald, I am sending this email on behalf of Athina who is currently on vacation. Apologies for the delay in our response, it took us a while to verify the accuracy of our numbers. We can confirm that exactly three memberships have been terminated so far in 2016 for “non-financial” reasons, and one further case is currently in process. We terminated four memberships in 2015. It is worth noting that so far we have never terminated a membership following a report from an external party — these terminations were the result of our own investigations regarding the submission of false or fraudulent information that were initiated after suspicious member activity. Regarding the other numbers we provided, we do not report on actions taken as the result of reports received through the form on our website. This is due to a concern that it could be used maliciously (e.g. people reporting on their competitors). We thought it would be helpful to show the kinds of reports we receive, but agree that this only provides part of the picture. When we receive a report through the form we always take action where appropriate. Best regards, Ingrid Wijte Assistant manager Registration Services RIPE NCC On 14/08/2016 10:02, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
Ms. Fragkouli,
Thank you for providing the Anti-Abuse Working Group with numerical information relating to your department's processing of "complaints" (which I personally prefer to call "reports") during 2016 and 2015.
Unfortunately, something seems to have been lost in translation, as my request made its way to you, and thus, the numbers you provided, although interesting, do not actually answer the questions that I was was interested in obtaining answers for, as I explain below.
In message <5b6fca31-1033-7120-efb0-7d7e0eb604fe@ripe.net>, Athina Fragkouli <athina.fragkouli@ripe.net> wrote:
So far in 2016... Around four memberships have been terminated for one of these other reasons (submitting fraudulent documents, failure to comply with audits or failure to supply proof of existence). Around four? Would it be possible for you to be a bit more specific?
In 2015, we received 319 reports through the form: - 131 were reported as incorrect data in the RIPE Database. 67 of these required further investigation by the RIPE NCC. - 180 cases were reported as policy violations, untruthful information or were related to bankruptcy. 143 of these cases turned out not to be policy violations, seven could not be followed up due to lack of information and five resulted in further inquiries. 25 did indeed concern policy violations, untruthful information, or bankruptcy. - Eight cases were not classified as abuse reports but were investigated nonetheless. It is always wonderful to have concrete numbers to work with, except of course in cases where the numbers in question have more to do with irrelevancies (e.g. the price of tea in China, as we say here) than they have to do with the actual topic at hand.
Ms. Fragkouli, I may perhaps be the only one, but I cannot help but notice that in and among all of the various figures you've quoted, authoritatively, above, there is no number which indicates -either- (a) the total number of cases in which RIPE NCC actually did take some action, i.e. -any- action, against any member in 2015 -or- (b) the specific number of cases in 2015 in which RIPE NCC took some action or actions against a member that was actually relevant to the interests and work of the Anti-Abuse Working Group specifically. (I don't believe that any of us here are really all that interested to know how many RIPE NCC members went bankrupt in 2015.)
Perhaps I have only failed to read your comments clearly... and if so, I do apologize for that... but whereas I see that you have clearly said how you and your department -categorized- all of the 2015 reports you processed, I do not see any clear statement from you about how many actual -actions- against members were instituted in 2015.
I would like to obtain that number, i.e. the number of actual 2015 actions, not counting financially-related ones.
Ms. Fragkouli, would it perhaps be possible for the RIPE NCC staff to provide a number... both for calendar 2015 and also, perhaps, for prior years... that would accurately reflect the number of cases (e.g. in 2015 at least) where RIPE NCC actually -did- take the action of discontinuing the membership of a member for reasons -other than- the non-payment of fees or bankruptcy?
To be sure we are clear, it is really only the total number of non- financial-related actual termination actions that are of interest here in the WG.
If you could provide those numbers, that would be most helpful.
I thank you in advance for your help and participation.
Regards, rfg
In message <fbc7a33c-98ba-18ca-dd70-7ab6d8ee3979@ripe.net>, Ingrid Wijte <ingrid@ripe.net> wrote:
We can confirm that exactly three memberships have been terminated so far in 2016 for non-financial reasons, and one further case is currently in process. We terminated four memberships in 2015. It is worth noting that so far we have never terminated a membership following a report from an external party these terminations were the result of our own investigations regarding the submission of false or fraudulent information that were initiated after suspicious member activity.
Ms. Wijte, I can't thank you enough for following up on my queries. The information you've provided will be really very helpful, I think. Further to this whole discussion, I have just a couple of additional brief question about these seven fully completed non-financial member terminations that you have processed in 2015 and so far in 2016: First, among these seven completed non-financial member terminations, can you state how many of those cases involved members who were or are "natural persons"? Second, I am looking at this document which seems to be the current version of the RIPE Standard Service Agreement: https://www.ripe.net/publications/docs/ripe-626 I am specifically looking at Section 9, "Term and Termination". I am not an attorney, so I hope that you can help me to correctly interpret that Section. In your opinion, would it be accurate to say that following the termination of one of these RIPE Standard Service Agreements RIPE NCC does not have any sort of ongoing "duty of care" with respect to the terminated member, I mean, you know, AFTER the termination? (I do not see anything in Section 9 that calls for any kind of ongoing duty which is binding upon either party, after termination of The Agreement, but perhaps I just missed something.) Thanks again for your input. I certainly find it most helpful, and I believe that others here will too. Regards, rfg
Hi Ronald,
First, among these seven completed non-financial member terminations, can you state how many of those cases involved members who were or are "natural persons"? We can confirm that of these seven terminations, none involved members who were natural persons. In your opinion, would it be accurate to say that following the termination of one of these RIPE Standard Service Agreements RIPE NCC does not have any sort of ongoing "duty of care" with respect to the terminated member, I mean, you know, AFTER the termination? (I do not see anything in Section 9 that calls for any kind of ongoing duty which is binding upon either party, after termination of The Agreement, but perhaps I just missed something.) In accordance with article 9.5 of the Standard Service Agreement, when a membership is terminated we cease providing any RIPE NCC services and begin the deregistration procedure according to section B. of “Closure of Members, Deregistration of Internet Resources and Legacy Internet Resources”. Once the resources have been deregistered, we have no further contact or relationship with them and neither party has any ongoing duty to the other*.
You can find the “Closure of Members, Deregistration of Internet Resources and Legacy Internet Resources” document here: https://www.ripe.net/publications/docs/ripe-640 Kind regards Ingrid Wijte Registration Services Assistant Manager RIPE NCC *Beyond outstanding financial obligations in the case of non-payment of membership fees.
Ms. Wijte, Thanks so much for your further reply. I think that I have just one last question... In message <8cf746fe-be8a-4782-8213-7ce7d01d6908@ripe.net>, Ingrid Wijte <ingrid@ripe.net> wrote:
We can confirm that of these seven terminations {2015/2016}, none involved members who were natural persons.
OK. Good. That's what I suspected might be the case.
In accordance with article 9.5 of the Standard Service Agreement, when a membership is terminated we cease providing any RIPE NCC services and begin the deregistration procedure according to section B. of Closure of Members, Deregistration of Internet Resources and Legacy Internet Resources. Once the resources have been deregistered, we have no further contact or relationship with them and neither party has any ongoing duty to the other*.
OK. Good. That's what I suspected might be the case. So, given that (a) none of the seven RIPE NCC members who were terminated for non-financial reasons in 2015 & 2016 (a) were "natural persons", also also (b) that RIPE NCC owes -no- ongoing duty of care to any of these seven terminated member entities, would it be possible for RIPE NCC to release, e.g to the Anti-Abuse Working Group, copies of the various bona fide documents relating to just these seven non-financially-terminated former members, e.g. so that members of the Anti-Abuse Working Group could study them, e.g. to look for patterns which might help to reduce future problems and incidents of the kind(s) that were caused by these seven former (and now terminated) members? Regards, rfg
Hi Ronald, The RIPE NCC does not disclose non-public information on a voluntary basis. We are unable to share this with the working group. Kind regards Ingrid Wijte On 18/08/2016 23:57, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
Ms. Wijte,
Thanks so much for your further reply. I think that I have just one last question...
In message <8cf746fe-be8a-4782-8213-7ce7d01d6908@ripe.net>, Ingrid Wijte <ingrid@ripe.net> wrote:
We can confirm that of these seven terminations {2015/2016}, none involved members who were natural persons. OK. Good. That's what I suspected might be the case.
In accordance with article 9.5 of the Standard Service Agreement, when a membership is terminated we cease providing any RIPE NCC services and begin the deregistration procedure according to section B. of “Closure of Members, Deregistration of Internet Resources and Legacy Internet Resources”. Once the resources have been deregistered, we have no further contact or relationship with them and neither party has any ongoing duty to the other*. OK. Good. That's what I suspected might be the case.
So, given that (a) none of the seven RIPE NCC members who were terminated for non-financial reasons in 2015 & 2016 (a) were "natural persons", also also (b) that RIPE NCC owes -no- ongoing duty of care to any of these seven terminated member entities, would it be possible for RIPE NCC to release, e.g to the Anti-Abuse Working Group, copies of the various bona fide documents relating to just these seven non-financially-terminated former members, e.g. so that members of the Anti-Abuse Working Group could study them, e.g. to look for patterns which might help to reduce future problems and incidents of the kind(s) that were caused by these seven former (and now terminated) members?
Regards, rfg
In message <e6dccd6b-a4d4-6900-b6ba-8389a4adb934@ripe.net>, Ingrid Wijte <ingrid@ripe.net> wrote:
The RIPE NCC does not disclose non-public information on a voluntary basis. We are unable to share this with the working group.
Ms. Wijte, Let us be clear about this. We are discussing seven cases from 2015 and 2016 in which some legal entity behaved so badly that it actually had its membership terminated by RIPE NCC for non-financial reasons. As you have already stipulated, these entities are not natural persons, and thus, EU personal privacy regulations do not apply to any of these cases. Separately and additionally, you have stated that RIPE NCC is under no ongoing legal obligation whatsoever with respect to these seven entities. More to the point however, although RIPE NCC may indeed wish, as a matter of policy, to refrain from disclosing "non-public information", any such policy is obviously, demonstratably, and utterly irrelevant to the request I have made. I am compelled to call your attention to the fact that within essentially all of the countries that comprise the RIPE geographical region, governmental records of the legitimate existance of legally established business and non-profit entities... including even RIPE NCC itself... are in fact open public records. Thus, it would appear, RIPE NCC legal staff is now placing itself in the rather awkard position of refusing to release records which, by their very nature, are public governmental records, i.e. those which merely attest to the bare legal existance of these seven former, and now terminated, RIPE NCC members. Given these facts, I ask you again to provide to the Anti-Abuse Working Group the various bona fides documents which these seven dubious "legal" entities used when they originally applied for their now terminated RIPE NCC memberships. There is no compelling reason, either as a matter of law, or as a matter of policy, for RIPE NCC legal staff to deliberately withhold what are in fact public governmental records and documents. Should the RIPE NCC legal staff continue to do so, then I believe that action will call into question the legal staff's true motivations with respect to this matter. Thus, I reiterate my request yet again, and ask you, in your capacity as a representative of the RIPE NCC legal staff, to provide these documents to the Working Group without further delay. Regards, rfg
Hi all, As a representative of a RIPE member, LIR ru.fotontelecom, I'd like to express my full agreement with Ronald F. Guilmette that the information on terminated membership MUST be publicly available, otherwise it leads to conclusion that RIPE NCC is playing games with both membership and those abusers which they were receiving money from. I fully understand that this is a serious accusation, but I can't find any other reason for RIPE NCC to justify obscuring this data. 22 августа 2016 г. 23:16:47 GMT+03:00, "Ronald F. Guilmette" <rfg@tristatelogic.com> пишет:
In message <e6dccd6b-a4d4-6900-b6ba-8389a4adb934@ripe.net>, Ingrid Wijte <ingrid@ripe.net> wrote:
The RIPE NCC does not disclose non-public information on a voluntary basis. We are unable to share this with the working group.
Ms. Wijte,
Let us be clear about this. We are discussing seven cases from 2015 and 2016 in which some legal entity behaved so badly that it actually had its membership terminated by RIPE NCC for non-financial reasons. As you have already stipulated, these entities are not natural persons, and thus, EU personal privacy regulations do not apply to any of these cases. Separately and additionally, you have stated that RIPE NCC is under no ongoing legal obligation whatsoever with respect to these seven entities.
More to the point however, although RIPE NCC may indeed wish, as a matter of policy, to refrain from disclosing "non-public information", any such policy is obviously, demonstratably, and utterly irrelevant to the request I have made.
I am compelled to call your attention to the fact that within essentially all of the countries that comprise the RIPE geographical region, governmental records of the legitimate existance of legally established business and non-profit entities... including even RIPE NCC itself... are in fact open public records. Thus, it would appear, RIPE NCC legal staff is now placing itself in the rather awkard position of refusing to release records which, by their very nature, are public governmental records, i.e. those which merely attest to the bare legal existance of these seven former, and now terminated, RIPE NCC members.
Given these facts, I ask you again to provide to the Anti-Abuse Working Group the various bona fides documents which these seven dubious "legal" entities used when they originally applied for their now terminated RIPE NCC memberships.
There is no compelling reason, either as a matter of law, or as a matter of policy, for RIPE NCC legal staff to deliberately withhold what are in fact public governmental records and documents. Should the RIPE NCC legal staff continue to do so, then I believe that action will call into question the legal staff's true motivations with respect to this matter. Thus, I reiterate my request yet again, and ask you, in your capacity as a representative of the RIPE NCC legal staff, to provide these documents to the Working Group without further delay.
Regards, rfg
-- Sergey Simonenko Foton Telecom CJSC Chief Technical Officer
Sergey, [ apologies for commenting on an old thread - I just got back from vacation ] At 2016-08-22 23:27:01 +0300 Sergey <gforgx@fotontel.ru> wrote:
As a representative of a RIPE member, LIR ru.fotontelecom, I'd like to express my full agreement with Ronald F. Guilmette that the information on terminated membership MUST be publicly available, otherwise it leads to conclusion that RIPE NCC is playing games with both membership and those abusers which they were receiving money from.
As a representative of a RIPE NCC member maybe you could bring this up with other RIPE NCC members in whatever forum you guys do that stuff? (I haven't ever been such a person so I don't know how it works.) I'm in favor of maximum transparency, but it seems like something outside of the scope of RIPE, and something that the RIPE NCC needs to sort out. :)
I fully understand that this is a serious accusation, but I can't find any other reason for RIPE NCC to justify obscuring this data.
If you just mean the names of the LIR with terminated memberships and (maybe) the dates of termination then I agree it makes sense if it is part of the public record as claimed by Ronald. I can imagine all kinds of reasons why additional data could be considered private. But again, this is something for RIPE NCC members to figure out! Cheers, -- Shane
On Mon, Aug 22, 2016 at 01:16:47PM -0700, Ronald F. Guilmette wrote:
More to the point however, although RIPE NCC may indeed wish, as a matter of policy, to refrain from disclosing "non-public information", any such policy is obviously, demonstratably, and utterly irrelevant to the request I have made.
Your request is off-topic for this WG. The NCC is content-agnostic and "internet abuse" is not a reason to terminate a contract and close a LIR. It also concerns a contractual issue between the RIPE NCC and the member(s) in question. This is not the business of the RIPE community or any WG (other than, perhaps, ncc-services) The NCC has, in the spirit of helpfulness, shown you some courtesy in providing certain information - a courtesy that, given your continued attempts to paint it as either hapless idiots or a den of thieves, you don't deserve. Even the request for numbers of closures as well as the answer given were strictly-speaking off-topic for this WG. rgds, Sascha Luck
In message <20160822231248.GD93886@cilantro.c4inet.net>, "Sascha Luck [ml]" <aawg@c4inet.net> wrote:
Your request is off-topic for this WG. The NCC is content-agnostic and "internet abuse" is not a reason to terminate a contract and close a LIR.
Not to disagree, but may I simply ask how you know that? I mean how do you know, to a moral certainty, that none of the (now former) seven RIPE NCC members who were terminated in 2015 and in 2016 for non-financial reasons were not terminated on the basis of "internet abuse"? Are you personally privy to the relevant internal RIPE NCC reports, final or otherwise, which elaborate the exact reasons for these seven terminations? If so, perhaps you would be willing to share those. If not, I can only suggest that you are making suppositions, albeit based upon good faith inferences, but that the actual facts, if revealed, might support alternative conclusions. (What _is_ known and what _is_ public knowledge appears to indicate that RIPE NCC's enforcement of its own well-established policies is, in essence, a black box... member entities go in one side, someone turns a crank, and some number of members come out the other side, but in a "terminated" state. Written and public policies describe, in sort-of vague general terms, what everyone hopes and wants to believe actually occurs within the black box, but at the end of the day, it's still a black box.)
It also concerns a contractual issue between the RIPE NCC and the member(s) in question. This is not the business of the RIPE community or any WG (other than, perhaps, ncc-services)
It has already been stipulated, by RIPE NCC legal itself, that RIPE NCC owes no ongoing duty of confidentiality to these seven now-terminated former member entities... all seven of whom have apparently tried to screw both RIPE NCC and the RIPE Community, i.e. by violating RIPE's own rules so badly that in the end, there was nothing left to do but to kick them all out entirely. Further, as the mere identities of these former non-person member entities was not, is not, and could never have been in any sense "confidential"... the purported identities of these corporate entities having been listed *both* in national corporate registries *and* also in RIPE NCC's own WHOIS data base... I confess that I do have a bit of trouble understanding the basis of the apparent reluctance to release even just the identities or identifying documents of these entities.
The NCC has, in the spirit of helpfulness, shown you some courtesy in providing certain information
Yes, well, so far, RIPE NCC legal has indeed been helpful in providing me with the information that they can provide me with -no- information about the seven terminated former member entities. (Excuse me for saying so, but If this is what passes for a "spirit of helpfulness" in your part of the world, then I do believe that I'll be scratching the Emerald Isle off of the itenerary for my next european vacation.) As regards to how this overall "spirit of helpfulness" pertains to the clear explanation, given here, of how either RIPE NCC or any LIR is able to magically vet the existance of, or identity of any purported Belizian or UAE "legal" entity, even where such vetting is rather obviously and provably impossible, like you I would applaud RIPE NCC Legal's helpfulness on this point if not for the unfortunate fact that I have yet to see any explanation of this abiding mystery posted here. Regards, rfg
In message <20160822231248.GD93886@cilantro.c4inet.net>, "Sascha Luck [ml]" <aawg@c4inet.net> wrote:
It also concerns a contractual issue between the RIPE NCC and the member(s) in question. This is not the business of the RIPE community or any WG (other than, perhaps, ncc-services)
Sorry. Just a small clarification. I just now realized that I have been remiss in not clarifying, up front, that I certainly neither want nor expect RIPE NCC to release any data that might threaten or in any way impinge upon the legitimate national security concerns or interests of any nation, be it either within the RIPE geographic zone, or elsewhere. Thus, if it could be easily established, e.g. by consulting public sources, that any one of these seven terminated member entities was or is in fact just a front company for, e.g. NSA, GCHQ, BND, FSB, Mossad, or any other such entity, then I would be the last person in the world to either ask for or even wish for RIPE NCC to disclose any information at all in any such case or cases, and I would be the first to support any assertion of a "National Security Exception" at any such time as RIPE NCC elects to assert such a special exception. I mean after all, we *are* all fully supportive of the covert activities undertaken by these sorts of national security entities on our behalf, aren't we? Regards, rfg
participants (7)
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Athina Fragkouli
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Ingrid Wijte
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Radu Gheorghiu
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Ronald F. Guilmette
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Sascha Luck [ml]
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Sergey
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Shane Kerr