Hi again and sorry for the delayed reply.

I realize it is not an easy thing to solve.
I also both feel and understand that something needs to be done due to the
situation at hand.

The problem is that many of the solutions i would think of may include
administration overhead, but i guess i will put forward two maybe three
ideas.

The first and easiest but that will not satisfy everyone is the most
obvious one.
Only allow new members to procure from the waiting list and make the
addresses nontransferable.

This would in my opinion be a stop gap for a bigger solution because we
cannot go ahead and block legitimate business needs for larger entities
just because of newcomers like myself.
However that ties into my second more realistic approach of what might be
accepted but also requires some changes on the administration.

How about simply having a split queue system?
New members with single LIR goes to the front of the line and gets an
nontransferable address.
Others will according to their number of existing LIRs or ranges go to the
back of the line according to their current ownership where an legitimate
need for more ranges constitutes an expected revenue across said ranges and
as such the bigger expectancy of acquiring larger ranges via an market
otherwise said ranges are not being utilized properly (i understand the
existence of non profits and edge cases but not everyone can be 100%
satisfied, neither can i with this in the future)
Make an buffer that is not possible to be allocated to multi LIRs/multi
range holders.
I am not an old member enough to have good insight to where a good buffer
would be but for arguments sake i would say 100.

This means that there is supposed to be 100 /24 ranges available (Could be
20 or 30 or anything RIPE agrees on) and as long as there is, the "Multi
holder Queue" would be able to request ranges against motivational uses.

There could even be a third queue at say 250 ranges available where all the
ranges above that goes to open market against the requirement that they
become used within x time and if they are to be resold they have to be
resold/rented out at fair pricing. This could be 25,50 or whatever, i don't
have the insight yet on how often ranges are allocated to give an accurate
number and will not pretend as such either.

This would guarantee that the original spirit of the /24's for newcomers
idea is retained, while adopting to the wishes of the larger members as
well to a degree, I fully understand that there are some really really big
entities out there with big needs for IPv4 still and i don't want to block
them in any way shape or form because i one day hope to be able to make use
of our ranges and services to become on of the really big players, with the
benefit of being such a new player that i can already today build IPv6
native and just use IPv4 for the still required things and then hopefully
phase out IPv4 and return our ranges down the road.

We today have as i mentioned earlier an single IPv4 /24 available for our
older WISP/MSP datacenter, It was acquired from an entity called Resilans
(If mentioning other entities by name is not allowed i apologize) they also
helped us with the process of becoming an LIR and ripe member so we are
VERY grateful to them as even tho they did charge for their time, it was a
fair price and we would not be here today without them.

Entities like them are in my opinion fair and could benefit from the third
queue where they did price fairly against us and didnt try to gouge us like
other entities that have contacted us after we became members (some asked
for outrageous prices for a single /24)
They also provide the ability for non members that cannot become members
for some reason to acquire IPs for their business, such as it was for us
back then. We didn't have any multi-homing ability which we now will with
Datacenter 2 (Which is our fiber ISP location) and our L2 link between
them. So we didn't even qualify until recently and we also didn't feel we
could justify for our then VERY small operations being an LIR and the
administration around that, there are others like us out there and for them
an resell/second hand renting market of IPv4 is very beneficial

We all know IPv4 is a sinking ship and we implement stop gaps such as NAT
and then CGNAT to try and prolong its inevitable doom, but until that day
comes i hope that my understanding of RIPE so far is accurate where you..
Us all try to make the playing field as equal as possible without hindering
each others opportunities.

Sorry for the mile long message but this is in my opinion one of several
potential ways to do this down the road that might help in some way.

I would also like to put out there the idea of presenting the number of
ranges in store on the LIR waiting list graph, it would serve two purposes.

It would allow small entities like us that when there is a 0 waiting line
to have an understanding of how soon there might be a queue again so we can
plan our potential entry as an LIR. I actually held off on us being an LIR
because we had so much else to prepare and get in place for our new
venture, if i would have seen the graph rapidly declining i would have
tried to become one sooner and perhaps been able to grab one prior to the
member days rather than come in 5 days after the waiting list shot up.

The second benefit would also be to drive home the acute situation to
everyone and perhaps open up for more understanding for the smaller
entities out there that have to rely on this service to get IPv4 other than
turning to in some cases heavily overpriced addresses.

One last thing before i end this already too long rant.
Thank you all so far for not only actually listening to a newcomers rant
about our opinion, but also truly showing to us that you really care about
our opinion and input. We cant wait to be able to bring back and contribute
to this community and hopefully prove our self worthy of the time and
consideration shown so far.

Very warm regards, Mathias W
CEO and Infrastructure Architect - West digital Management AB.

On Fri, Dec 10, 2021 at 10:58 AM Sander Steffann <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Mathias,
>
> > I will be quite frank about this and say that it feel very disheartening
> to essentially miss the 0 day queue allocations by 5 days. end up in a one
> month long quque that just grows with no more allocations and on top of
> that it is VERY obvious that these organisations uses the members list as a
> "To be customers" base because about 4 hours after we became members we got
> mails and phonecalls from about 5 different companies stating they want to
> sell us IP adresses.
> >
> > It just feels like this is not what RIPE was intended for but obviously
> is being used for.
> >
> > I apologize if i am sounding too salty or if my mail is not according to
> well established RIPE etiquette, and dont get me wrong. we are VERY happy
> about being a new member with a single LIR and getting our own IPv6 and
> insight into the future of the internet, just felt that i should give the
> point of view of exactly one of those "Small new one lir members" that many
> here reffer to and exactly how our experience with this issue has been..
>
> Don't worry, you talk about your frustration quite politely :)  And it is
> totally justified. This is why I think something needs to be done now. Yes,
> it's rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic, but some people are still
> trying to survive.
>
> As a new member, what do you think about these ideas? Would it be good to
> make addresses untransferable? Or keep them transferable but ask the NCC to
> impose a one-time merger&acquisition fee? Or any other way? What would be
> ok for your real internet business but not for address sellers?
>
> Cheers,
> Sander
>
>
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