In message <CAFV686c9UFoCipkZGnm49zyf0wR07QyFFVpnHUDhwX37WCLfSw@mail.gmail.com> Jacob Slater <jacob@rezero.org> wrote:
The NCC's contracts do not forbid individuals/organizations from hijacking prefixes that do not belong to them*. That isn't their job. The NCC is tasked with guaranteeing uniqueness. They are not tasked with enforcing implementation constraints on others, especially not on a legal basis.
We are, I think, talking at cross purposes. My question did not entail or involve any kind of "enforcement". When it comes to issues of routing, e.g. the gibberish currently coming out of AS3266, I think that it is already well and widely understood that the the one and only "enforcement" mechanism that exists is what might simply be called "peer pressure". Contractual terms are not always enforced. If a contractual term existed today in any of the contracts that RIPE does (or has) entered into with any of its members, stipulating that the member shall not do X, and if any of those counterparties went ahead and did X anyway, it would quite obviously be up to RIPE's discression as to whether or not to enforce the relevant contractual term. And if the specific counterparty require- ment in question were along the lines of "Thou shalt not hijack other people's IP space" then I, for one, would certainly have -zero- expectation that RIPE would ever actually enforce such a provision... and it would certainly be RIPE's contractual right to never actually do so, if that was its preference... which it clearly is and would be. In short, I don't think that it takes all that much in the way of mental gymnastics to tease apart the intent and spirit of a contractual term and its enforcement. These are clearly two separate things. I suggest here what I hope will be a not very controversial notion, i.e. that an entity whose job it is to assign bits of IP space to various entities, in an orderly and disiplined fashion, might have an interest in fostering a clear and common understanding that various parties should make use of the space assigned to them, and not that which has been assigned to others. There are certainly innumerable ways in which this sort of common community understanding could be fostered, either more or less effectively. For example, purchasing a TV advertising slot in the middle of the SuperBowl would probably be a less than cost effective way of getting this message across, perticularly given that something well short of 100% of all RIPE members would be likely to see that. In contrast, I think that it is a reasonable assumption to say that very nearly 100% of all RIPE members do at least glance over the contracts they sign with RIPE before they sign them.