Preston - 

As a point of clarity – when you suggest that “removing this barrier should be 
given great consideration”, do you mean for removing the barrier for 
"legitimate networks operated by individuals” (such as you referenced in your 
explanation), or for removal of the barrier for individuals in general?

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers


> On Apr 16, 2025, at 3:51 PM, Preston Ursini via ARIN-PPML 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I know of at least one individual that was working to start a network and was 
> harmed by this.  He is a colocation customer, unincorporated, and uses his 
> network for himself and his place of employment; however the employer did not 
> want to go through the process of obtaining numbering assets from ARIN, and 
> the network is used for his own joint venture.  He simply saw the requirement 
> and did not proceed.
> 
> I would ascertain that most legitimate networks operated by individuals is 
> probably relatively small, however our colo somewhat acts as a network 
> incubator giving a place for small networks to grow.  I believe most 
> individuals stopped by this requirement would not reach out to ARIN for 
> change.  If you look at some IXPs you’ll see there are plenty ran under 
> assumed names, with some IXPs themselves being ran by individuals that aren’t 
> incorporated.
> 
> If you look into small ISPs and IXPs, and their start, you’ll find that many 
> of them start off as unincorporated sole proprietors.  One thing we’ve found 
> is that these networks are likely to end up leasing IP space from an upstream 
> provider as the barrier to obtaining their own IP Assets may be seen as too 
> high.  In short, this causes providers that could probably get away with IPv6 
> + NRPM 4.10 IPv4 w/ CG-NAT are being forced to lease IPv4 as these lessors 
> have a financial incentive to show leased IPv4 as a necessity for a new 
> network, thus also possibly having the effect of stalling IPv6 adoption for 
> these small networks that in turn grow into large ones.  Getting them 
> onboarded w/ ARIN and running IPv6 from the start would be a win.  More 
> educational material for IPv6 and numbering planning from ARIN would be 
> great, and lowering and/or removing perceived barriers to entry will do a lot 
> long term to help with this.
> 
> In short: We help small networks navigate this, and we have seen the 
> requirement for a business license / assumed name / etc act as a barrier to 
> entry for small networks, and I believe even for small IXPs, and may have a 
> side effect of causing a barrier to IPv6 adoption for small networks.
> 
> I believe the notion of removing this barrier should be given great 
> consideration.
> 
> Preston Ursini
> 

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