I agree that it must be possible to identify people who hold resources. Not 
just for other network operators but also so that organizations such as law 
enforcement are able to do so in emergency situations where contacting RIPE 
could be too slow.

It is worth noting however that there now is a relatively large number of 
people operating networks as a hobby outside of any business activity.

At RIPE 84 I mentioned the possibility of publishing a name and city only and 
having RIPE hold the full address. This would likely be enough to unique 
identify a person (or at least a small number of potential people in a single 
city that would be few enough for law enforcement to all check out) while not 
publishing the full addresses of people who could be at risk for various 
reasons. It would also be enough information to identify multiple objects 
belonging to the same person, for example to block traffic from all of their 
networks. The full address could still be obtained from RIPE with a court order 
if required.

—
Matthias Merkel
[https://cdn.staclar.com/logos/novecore/newlogo.png]
[Sent from Front]
On June 3, 2022, 10:29 AM GMT+2 
anti-abuse-wg@ripe.net<mailto:anti-abuse-wg@ripe.net> wrote:

Am 31.05.22 um 15:12 schrieb denis walker:

> Colleagues
>
> I have raised an issue on the DB WG mailing list about publishing in
> the database the identity of natural persons holding resources.

Hi, this mail triggered the expected avalanche of controversial responses, 
which quickly devolved into name-calling, so
I prefer to respond to the original instead of any of the later responses.

There are conflicting interests at work here. In your proposal, you mention the 
need to contact resource owners, which
is probably accepted by most.

However, besides wanting to contact someone, there is a legitimate need to 
identify bad actors and shun them with
whatever means at your disposal (SpamAssassin rules, IP blocks, nullroutes, 
whatever). I do not want to communicate with
them, just as I don't want to discuss with burglars about their actions!

So, a mere contact database (which could contain fully anonymized forwarding 
addresses through a "privacy provider",
like it's nowadays common for whois entries) would work for the purpose of 
contacting someone, but it does not work for
identifying who can be held accountable for abuse emitted from a network range.

For resources allocated to legal entities (companies, organizations, etc.) an 
identification of the organization should
be mandatory. This does not need to include personal data on employees that 
happen to be responsible for network or
abuse issues, I'm fine with role accounts here. So in this case, no objection 
to eliminate personal data (which often
becomes stale anyway after some years).

However, resources allocated to private persons are a bit different. I suppose 
very few private persons hold a /24
network range, and if they do, they probably fall squarely in the area of 
operating a business or other publicly visible
enterprise under their personal name, and in many jurisdictions they are 
required to do so with identifying information.
For example, in Germany you can't even have a web page without an imprint 
containing the names of people responsible for
the content if you address the general public, and if you do business of any 
kind and you're not a corporation, you must
do so under your name.

I suppose that RIPE operates mostly on the level of legal entities that can be 
identified without naming individual
persons. As such, it would be proper to clearly state that every database entry 
pertaining to a resource allocated
through RIPE must contain truthful and usable identifying information of the 
resource holder. In German, that's
"Ladungsfähige Anschrift" which was basically required to be an actual place of 
presence, but it appears that "virtual
office" providers have succeeded in letting their addresses count as 
"Ladungsfähige Anschrift". I'm not a legal expert,
I think this is wrong, but jurisprudence isn't always compatible with reason.

Since RIPE isn't bound by German law, they may choose contractual wording that 
provides reasonable value for all parties
involved. If all identifying information is lost, the abusers have won, as they 
have with domain whois already.

Cheers,
Hans-Martin

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