Search RPD Archives
Limit search to: Subject & Body Subject Author
Sort by:

[AFRINIC-rpd] New Policy Proposal: Inter RIR IPv4 Address Transfers (AFPUB-2013-V4-001-DRAFT-01)

Andrew Alston alston.networks at gmail.com
Mon Jan 14 18:30:24 UTC 2013


Maina,

 

While I agree with you to an extent, the problem is, and to continue your
analogy, when people believe there is still food in the fridge, no one goes
out and actually gets more.  The fact that the food is slowly going rotten
never seems to occur to people in this industry.  It's time to empty the
damn fridge and start over.  Otherwise, the rest of the world will end up
using our fridge as their toxic waste dump because we'll have grown so used
to eating rotten food that will accept more of it when the rest of the world
realizes it's gone bad.

 

If people want the v4 space, let them have it, and that in particular
applies to people on this continent.  Instead we sit in a situation where
the usefulness of v4 is extremely limited, and instead of maximizing what is
left of that usefulness, and using the v4 space before its sell by date, we
put processes and procedures and blockages in the way of those who DO have
the ability to consume the space in a legitimate manner.  Meanwhile, our
useful v4 pool slowly goes rotten until its useless and no one wants it.  

 

What does this end up doing?  Making waste out of what could have been used.
AfriNIC claims it needs revenue, well, wake up call, putting the community
in a position where it's so difficult to get space that they would rather
starve than apply for it, isn't conducive to actually getting people to pay
for the space we have and generate those needed revenues.  

 

Work this out long term. at currently, PI v6 space is free if you have PI v4
space. LIR v6 space is pretty cheap, you get a /32 as an LIR, chances are,
because of the size of the allocation, you're never gonna need another
allocation.  This means, end of life of v4, the revenue streams for the RIR
are going to take a hit, a significant one.  It is pure insanity to sit on
as much V4 as AfriNIC has and NOT promote its active usage in every way
possible, because if people have it, they are paying for it, either in terms
of the EU allocation fees or the recurring LIR fees.  Once the v4 is dead
in the rest of the world, no one is gonna want it, and the chance to
generate revenue which could be needed long term to sustain this
organization is GONE.

 

Let's not be fools and waste what we have by letting it go to rot sitting in
an allocation pool that has been made impossibly difficult to access due to
inefficiency, moving goal posts, inconsistency and complexity.

 

 

Andrew

 

From: Maina Noah [mailto:mainanoa at gmail.com] 
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2013 7:49 PM
To: Andrew Alston
Cc: Sunday Folayan; AfriNIC Resource Policy Discussion List
Subject: Re: [AFRINIC-rpd] New Policy Proposal: Inter RIR IPv4 Address
Transfers (AFPUB-2013-V4-001-DRAFT-01)

 

Guys,

 

IPv4 addresses are leftovers....lets focus on the fresh food...IPv6 and
catch up with those who no longer have leftovers remember they are deploying
IPv6 aggressively. Lets encourage that than wasting time on trying to figure
out how we can best use the left overs we have. See leftovers can only be
eaten after one night...then next night they come poisonous :-)

 

Maina Noah

 

On 14 January 2013 15:50, Andrew Alston <alston.networks at gmail.com> wrote:

Hi Sunday,

I would support such a policy as well, no questions asked, without even
blinking.  Particularly with the 3-1 ratio mentioned.  It was this ratio
that caused such huge arguments during a recent allocation, where AfriNIC
came out with arguments like "If someone is on a LAB pc, they aren't using a
phone at the same time, therefore it won't need an IP address" (Yes, I
actually have that logged).  Completely mad, since who turns off a phones
wireless the moment they walk into a PC lab....

If we can pass a policy that does this, treating the Universities and
research centres as end users and supporting this ratio for university
campuses in allocations, where allocations are based on documentation
surrounding enrolled student head count, I would be a very happy man.  You
want to co-draft with me?

Andrew


-----Original Message-----
From: Sunday Folayan [mailto:sfolayan at gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2013 2:42 PM
To: Andrew Alston
Cc: 'David Conrad'; 'AfriNIC Resource Policy Discussion List'
Subject: Re: [AFRINIC-rpd] New Policy Proposal: Inter RIR IPv4 Address
Transfers (AFPUB-2013-V4-001-DRAFT-01)

Andrew,

I like your statement ... "Let SOMEONE get some advantage out of the assets,
while they still has value".

I will support a policy proposal that has a reincarnation of John Postel go
round African Universities and Research Centres, looking at their LANs and
making a direct relacement of their Natted V4 space with routable v4
addresses and also matching v6 to go with it. oh ... we can even estimate 3
addresses per students population, since they will have laptops, pads and
fones, all requiring Wifi at the minimum.

That is a no-brainer to get the assets used, while they still have value.

Sunday.

On 14/01/2013 13:13, Andrew Alston wrote:
> The rest of the world is interested in African v4, because yes, while
> we are behind the curve on v6, is the fact is, the rest of the world
> is also behind on their v6 deployments.  We are just a lot more behind
> than they are :) Sadly reality is, people spoke to years about the
> fact that v4 was going to run out, hell, I remember sitting in Cairo
> in 2005 and hearing the arguments put forward by Tony Hain about this,
> no one wanted to listen.  Now, the v4 is gone and people need to keep
> going while they migrate/dual-stack.  So, there is demand for v4.
> Africa is in a unique position though, because by the time we run out
> of v4, the need for dual-stack will probably be a lot less than it is
> today, because the rest of the world will have stopped using nearly as
> much of it by that point at our current allocation rates.  Wanna take
> a guess at what is going to happen then if we aren't v6 ready?  Just
> like the rest of the world flogs us old equipment because they think
> they can get away with it, we'll suddenly become the dumping ground
> for the unused v4 that isn't needed anymore.  Sadly, if attitudes
> haven't changed, we may find that many companies buy into this and
actually get those assets.
>
> V4 assets are valuable today, a year or two from now, they will be a
> lot less valuable, 5 years from now, they will be practically
> worthless.  I'd rather see us get away from our v4 obsession by
> forcing people to go v6 depleting our pool, than drag it on so long
> that the rest of the world moves past it, and then continues to keep
> us in the back waters by selling us their now worthless v4 assets
> because we've never changed the mindset to "WE NEED V6".
>
> You know, I find this whole discussion to be kind of sad, we as
> African's claim we want to be part of the global community, we want
> open trade, we want the same rights and advantages as the rest of the
> world, we want to be part of the global economies, yet, we still sit
> and argue against getting involved globally.  It works both ways
> people, if we continue to hoard what we are VERY obviously not using
> (look at our allocation rates), simply because "It's my precious"
> (sorry, lame reference to lord of the rings), all we will do is
> further alienate ourselves from the rest of the globe.  That isn't
productive.
>
> Either find a way  to actually USE the v4 we have on the continent, or
> let it go, the first is obviously preferential, but if we can't do
> that because of all the reasons detailed in my last email or because
> of any other reasons, then let SOMEONE get some advantage out of the
> assets while they still have value.

_______________________________________________
rpd mailing list
rpd at afrinic.net
https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo.cgi/rpd

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.afrinic.net/pipermail/rpd/attachments/20130114/bb10a874/attachment.html>


More information about the RPD mailing list