From: Lee Howard
Subject: [arin-ppml] clarification of Board actions Feb 2 and Mar 18,
2009
To: ppml@arin.net
Message-ID: <376189.27706.qm@web63303.mail.re1.yahoo.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
The community has requested clarification from the Board on
the series of events and motivations that led to the emergency draft proposal
2009-1: Transfer Policy.
At its February 6, 2009 meeting, the Board accepted the recommendation of the
Advisory Council, finding that the process had been followed, and adopted
policy proposal 2008-6: Emergency Transfer Policy for IPv4 Addresses. The
Board has been concerned for some time that the lack of a liberalized transfer
policy would create legal risk: that we had not provided a mechanism to improve
the efficient utilization of previously-allocated resources, and that this risk was
significant enough to jeopardize ARIN?s ability to fulfill its stewardship mission.
The sense of the Board is that a transfer policy is needed well before IANA?s
last IPv4 allocation, to allow early transfers and ease the demand for IPv4
numbers from ARIN. Allowing for the possibility that demand might increase
as IANA allocates its last IPv4 numbers, the Board believes that there is
insufficient time for another full policy cycle. The policy in 2008-6 allowed
the Board to activate it by declaring an emergency, which the Board did.
The policy had certain gaps which, in the Board?s opinion, allowed for
exploitation. As noted in the minutes of the February 6 meeting, the Board
resolved to make certain edits to the policy that had just been adopted.
These edits were out of order: according to ARIN?s Policy Development
Process, the Board of Trustees may (in emergency circumstances) suspend
a policy or propose a policy, but may not edit the Number Resource Policy
Manual directly. Therefore, at its March 18, 2009 meeting, the Board
rescinded its action editing the policy, and proposed a new policy, which is
2009-1: Transfer Policy. The minutes of that meeting will be published once
Board members have reviewed them, according to the published procedure.
The
discussion of Draft Policy 2009-1: Transfer Policy has provided
valuable
input to the Board of Trustees. The Board notes that this draft policy
includes substantial
changes to current policy, and encourages constructive
discussion of the
draft policy as written.
Lee Howard
ARIN Secretary, but speaking without Board resolution
紛糾しているARINでの議論「2009-1」に関してARIN AC/Boardが、
どのような動機で"emergency"として牽引したかの明確化する為の投稿。
それを受けて、今までの「2009-1」の議論のまとめが投稿されました。
Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2009 18:10:52 -0400
From: "Alexander, Daniel"
Subject: [arin-ppml] Summary of 2009-1 discussion so far
To:
Message-ID:
<997BC128AE961E4A8B880CD7442D94800A83EE7D@NJCHLEXCMB01.cable.comcast.com>
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Hello All,
This email is rather long but I wanted to try and summarize some of the
discussion of 2009-1 so far. My apologies if I neglected any particular
comments or if my counts might be off. I was trying to select one or two
points from each of the major issues, and I was consolidating more than
one thread. If you have not done so already, please let the AC know if
you are in favor or against this proposal, or if you have specific
suggestions as to how the wording should be changed.
Thanks,
Dan Alexander
ARIN AC
PPML Postings: As of 5pm 3/30
In Favor:
None stated
Opposed:
Leo Bicknell
Kevin Kargel
Ted Mittelstaedt
William Herrin
Seth Mattinen
Jeremy H Griffith
Jay Hennigan
Contributions:
1 Dan Alexander
7 Leo Bicknell
1 Cort Buffington (CB)
1 Dale W Carder
3 John Curran
7 Bill Darte
3 Owen DeLong (OD)
4 Michael Dillon
7 David Farmer
1 Jeremy H Griffith (JG)
5 Martin Hannigan (MH)
1 Jay Hennigan
6 William Herrin (WH)
5 Lee Howard (LH)
11 Kevin Kargel
4 Mathew Kaufman
2 Eliot Lear
4 Scott Leibrand (SL)
2 Seth Mattinen (SM)
6 Ted Mittelstaedt
3 Milton L Mueller
4 John Schnizlein
1 Michael K Smith
1 Stephen Sprunk
2 Bill Woodcock
Notable Points:
Recurring questions of clarity and procedure.
Why did the BoT use the Emergency PDP?
Where is the proper explanation in the meeting minutes?
What was the emergency?
Why was this needed?
Is 2008-6 actually accepted and just not implemented?
(OD) "The same argument could be made about laws with sunset clauses,
but, the same applies. While it is true that the community can change
things and could even repeal a sunset clause, the sunset clause creates
a default action that occurs unless the community takes action.
Additionally, repealing a policy, even
if there is strong community consensus to do so, takes time. By having
a sunset clause in place, it clearly indicates that the intent of the
community is for the policy to be temporary and short-term in nature,
and, it creates a default action of removing the policy after some
period of time, rather than requiring additional subsequent action by
the community to do so."
(LB) "In broad terms, sunset provisions can be used for two purposes:
- To reduce future workload on a body where it is expected the item
will no longer be useful at some point. Rather than having to waste
time removing old policy it automatically goes.
- To require a body to re-evaluate an item via the normal debate
process in the future because the current authors are worried
the plan is not yet perfect, and/or the situation may change."
(WH) "2008-06 intentionally sunsetted section 8.4 three years after
adoption. This was no accident: the community has long been suspicious
of processes that effectively permit the sale of IP addresses from one
party to another. We're willing to give it a chance, but if we don't
like what we see, we don't want to have to fight again to take the
policy back out... especially with the board hinting it might try
sketchy procedural maneuvers in order to overrule such an effort."
(WH) "Under normal ARIN policy, any legal entity which can justify its
request may receive number resources. Though normally companies or other
organizations, this does occasionally apply to individuals. AS 11875 for
example. 2009-1 restricts the transfer recipients to "organizations."
2008-6 retains ARIN's broader definition of eligible recipients."
(JG) "So far I have seen *NO* support for this policy. Zero.
Zip. If it goes forward anyway, it will be very clear that the ideas of
"consensus" and "community policy" are mere travesties, to be discarded
whenever the BOT finds that convenient."
(WH) "Should the board elect to promptly withdraw proposal 2009-1, let's
say by close of business Friday, it would be my pleasure to resubmit the
text of the proposal to the normal policy process and serve as the
proposal's author."
(SM) "Lack of interest in entities adopting IPv6 is not ARIN's
emergency. It's a business case issue, as in many orgs see no business
case for putting forth the effort to deploy IPv6 in their networks, not
an "emergency"."
(CB) "Emergency? I think so. But I don't think that the majority of the
networking community will choose to deal with this until it reaches
crisis state. By the time we reach crisis, the problem will be too big
to worry about pointing fingers. As usual in the US, those who were
responsible enough to deal with it before it became and emergency will
see no benefit since there will be some kind of either bailout, or
social acceptance of the crisis and the half-baked solutions that will
come with waiting until two weeks past the very last date to reasonable
address the issue."
(LH) "The sense of the Board is that a transfer policy is needed well
before IANA's last IPv4 allocation, to allow early transfers and ease
the demand for IPv4 numbers from ARIN. Allowing for the possibility
that demand might increase as IANA allocates its last IPv4 numbers, the
Board believes that there is insufficient time for another full policy
cycle. The policy in 2008-6 allowed the Board to activate it by
declaring an emergency, which the Board did. The policy had certain gaps
which, in the Board's opinion, allowed for exploitation. As noted in
the minutes of the February 6 meeting, the Board resolved to make
certain edits to the policy that had just been adopted. These edits
were out of order: according to ARIN's Policy Development Process, the
Board of Trustees may (in emergency circumstances) suspend a policy or
propose a policy, but may not edit the Number Resource Policy Manual
directly. Therefore, at its March 18, 2009 meeting, the Board rescinded
its action editing the policy, and proposed a new policy, which is
2009-1: Transfer Policy. The minutes of that meeting will be published
once Board members have reviewed them, according to the published
procedure."
Suggestions:
(MH) "Number resources are issued based on justified need to
organizations and not to individuals that represent those organizations.
Upon notification that a major negative event related to the
Corporations solvency [define these in definitions] has occurred, ARIN
will freeze all assigned provider independent "PI" address space,
ASN's, and affiliated resources deemed necessary to protect ARIN
assigned number resources and their disposition. Changes to these
resources during the negative event will be processed in a manner
consistent with ARIN policy and agreements in effect at the time of the
negative event".
(SL) "I heard a number of people express the opinion that we don't want
to set a permanent precedent allowing transfers of IPv6 (and ASN). Both
2008-2 and 2008-6 were very explicit that transfers were only being
allowed as a result of the extraordinary circumstance of IPv4
exhaustion, and that such transfers would not be allowed for any other
type of number resource. I believe it would be appropriate to restore
such a limitation to section 8.3 of 2009-1."
(WH) "The changed text in 8.2 implies that a transfer of resources will
not be permitted except as a result of a merger or acquisition. Does
this rule out any kind of transfer that was previously permitted? If so,
what?"
(WH) "The original use of the word "effecting" was correct. The
instrument(s) effecting the transfer of assets. You don't affect a
change, you effect a change. The use of the word "affecting" in 2009-1
is incorrect."
ppmlでは更に議論が進んでいます。
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