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[rpd] Draft inbound policy

h.lu at anytimechinese.com h.lu at anytimechinese.com
Tue Jun 21 06:20:11 UTC 2016


Hi Owen:

I agree with you the policy is not fair--as I just said in my last reply.

However, if you look world policy today, many policy that design to help developing country are not exactly fair as well, take post service as example,  developed country has to pay all country high fees while developing country only has to pay all country low fee.

Afrinic has least developed countries compare to the other RIRs here therefore some special treatment might not be a bad idea.



> On 21 Jun 2016, at 01:15, Owen DeLong <owen at delong.com> wrote:
> 
> I am thoroughly opposed to this policy.
> 
> It is not fair in that it is a one-way (inbound-only) policy. If AfriNIC wants to participate in the inter-RIR transfer process, then it should do so as a full citizen on an equal footing.
> 
> Further, there is really no reason whatsoever to move IPv6 resources and ASNs around between RIRs as far as I am concerned.
> 
> Finally, making the qualifications to receive transferred resources so much less stringent than the current criteria to receive resources from the free pool is misguided at best, IMHO and likely to cause significant incorrect incentives in the market place at worst.
> 
> Owen
> 
>> On Jun 17, 2016, at 02:09 , Andrew Alston <Andrew.Alston at liquidtelecom.com> wrote:
>> 
>> Hi All,
>> 
>> The following has been submitted to policy-submission and I am also posting it here for discussion in the mean time.
>> 
>> Thanks
>> 
>> Andrew
>> 
>> Draft Policy Name: Inbound Transfer Policy
>> Unique Identifier:
>> Status: Under Discussion
>> Submission Date: 17 June 2016
>> Amends: N/A
>> 
>> Author(s): 
>> a. Andrew Alston (andrew.alston at liquidtelecom.com)
>> b. Christopher Mwangi (Christopher.mwangi at liquidtelecom.com)
>> 
>> 
>> 1. Introduction:
>> The AfriNIC Service Region has the lowest amount of IPv4 space of any of the RIR defined regions.  As such, when AfriNIC depletes its current space, there will still be a need for further IPv4 addresses on the continent. In addition to this, there may be circumstances where companies wish to use specific v6 resources and ASN’s unavailable on the continent.
>> 
>> While the community has voiced concerns that enacting a transfer policy will result in the flow of resources off the continent, this policy addresses that by purely catering for inbound transfers, without allowing or affecting transfers flowing out of the continent to other RIR service regions.
>> 
>> 2. Resources covered under this policy
>> This policy covers the inbound transfer of all IP resources, including ASN’s, both 16bit and 32bit, IPv4 space and IPv6 space 
>> 
>> 3. Details of inbound transfer requirements
>> AfriNIC shall accept all inbound transfers of all resources explicitly referred to in section 2
>> For transfers into the region, the recipient of IP space (v4 or v6) must provide a plan to AfriNIC for the use of at least 50% of the transferred resource within the next 5 years.
>> Once received, the space shall form part of the recipient’s normal allocations for the purpose of evaluating the size of the recipient from an AfriNIC membership perspective.
>> Should a recipient of transferred space apply for further resources from AfriNIC directly, all space received via transfers shall be included in any evaluation done for further resource allocation by AfriNIC.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
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> 
> 
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