El 21/10/20 12:16, "address-policy-wg en nombre de Jim Reid" 
<[email protected] en nombre de [email protected]> escribió:


    > On 21 Oct 2020, at 10:07, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ via address-policy-wg 
<[email protected]> wrote:
    > 
    > It is not fair that legacy holders are not bind to policies and services 
(and their cost) from the RIRs the same way as non-legacy.

    Maybe, maybe not. There are plenty of other far more expensive cost centres 
in the NCC’s budget that are not fairly shared across the membership and 
nobody’s whining about them. Just look at all those cheapskates who get DNS and 
whois lookups from the NCC for free. Many of them aren’t even from the RIPE 
community. They should be paying. :-)

[Jordi] Not saying not to that. It is a community/membership decision to keep 
offering those services, and do it for free or find a way to only offer for 
free to members and a subscription fee for others, etc.

    > We "rewind history" in real life all the time. There are laws (and 
customs) that as time passes, we discover that were wrong or broken or need to 
be adapted to new times

    That’s not rewriting history Jordi. You should know better.

    Whenever customs and laws change, the new measures do not apply to whatever 
had happened in the past. They apply to the present and future. For instance, 
suppose a government changes increases income tax. They don’t make you pay the 
increased rate for all the preceding years before the rate went up.

[Jordi] No, is not always like that. If there is a new tax for something, of 
course typically you will not pay for the past years, but you will pay for the 
new years since the tax is established. If you don't want to pay that tax, then 
you can release the "resource" that is covered by that tax. In Spain there are 
many examples of that, and I'm sure this is true for many other countries 
worldwide.

    > Transfers are a way to correct that, as it has been said (and done in 
other regions). And every day it has less sense to keep the resources legacy: 
you need other resources from the RIR (like IPv6, other ASN, etc.), so then you 
sign the service agreement.

    I’ve already explained why that’s utterly wrong.

    If you think legacy holders should pay something, I maybe agree with that 
in principle. [But definitely not signing a service agreement which forces a 
legacy holder to become an LIR.] And maybe that’s a discussion that could be 
had once there was some hard data.

    My gut feel is the cost to the NCC of looking after legacy space is 
negligible and not worth worrying about. It’ll barely be a rounding error in 
the Registry Services budget. Setting up and running a system to recover that 
insignificant amount of money from legacy holders will cost far more: 
contracts, invoicing, staff time, etc. Assuming there was a legal basis for 
imposing those charges. Which there almost certainly isn’t.

[Jordi] The point is that, as I said, RIPE region is somehow "special" on that, 
so even if here could be negligible, it not in other regions.

    OTOH devising such a system will provide endless opportunities for the 
shed-painting and rat-holing that some members of our community *love*. Who 
cares about the underlying issue? Just think of all the months we can waste 
bickering over the policy and process minutiae.

    In any case, the RIPE community and the NCC membership simply shouldn’t 
attempt this sort of micro-management. That’s the path to madness: “I want X 
EUR off my fee because I didn’t use any of the training courses last year. Or 
RIPEstat. Or take part in a hackathon. Or update my database entries. Or....”.

[Jordi] No discussion on this point, fully agree!

    It may well be reasonable to say something’s not fair. For some definition 
of fair. But it can sometimes be even more unreasonable to attempt to correct 
that -- extra costs, more complexity, higher administrative overheads, -- etc 
it simply isn’t worth the effort. Or addressing that unfairness creates other 
unfairnesses elsewhere. Sometimes pragmatic decisions have to be made because 
these are the least-worst solutions for the perceived level of unfairness.

[Jordi] Agree as well ... however, sometimes is not a matter of how much is the 
cost, but about is or looks as simply unfair. And yes, resolving an unfairness 
here may create an unbalance in the other side, but this is real life, nothing 
different.

    > RIPE region is a bit special on that, in the sense that we have a single 
fee for everything, but in other regions is not the same way, and it is somehow 
proportional to the "amount" of resources you hold. I also think that's unfair. 
Of course, that's a different discussion ... 

    Indeed. And a discussion to be had somewhere else, perhaps at the NCC’s 
AGM. The NCC used to have a byzantine charging scheme for setting membership 
fees based (roughly) on the member’s allocation of NCC-issued resources. 
Broadly speaking, the biggest LIRs paid more. However that system was hard to 
administer and created too many problems. So the membership applied common 
sense and voted to have a flat fee.

[Jordi] Not a member, so can't bring it back to the AGM ... but what it makes 
sense for 1 out of 5 RIRs, seems to be the contrary as in the case of the other 
4. Not convinced that's common sense!

    If you want legacy holders to pay, both the RIPE and NCC policy making 
machinery is open to you.

[Jordi] Undoubtedly, it's already "on the works" ...





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