On 6 Jan 2020, at 11:43 PM, Stephen Wilcox 
<swil...@ixreach.com<mailto:swil...@ixreach.com>> wrote:

Out of interest, what does it take to have an ARIN contract or core ARIN 
services revoked? Is there such a threshold, does breach of contract ever 
result in consequential action?

This seems more like a talking point than an act with teeth to it…

Steve -

This action is due to misuse of ARIN’s Whois services: specifically, 
organizations that routinely misuse the Whois data risk losing access to the 
information.

As I noted elsewhere, it is possible for the suspension of access to Whois to 
be technically circumvented, but ARIN still has to take abuse of the data 
seriously because our customers make their contact data available specifically 
for facilitating network operations, and this includes terminating or 
suspending access to the Whois service for those who chronically fail to comply 
with the terms of use, such as those who repeatedly violate the prohibition on 
marketing & solicitation using ARIN Whois data.

It is also possible that such misuse of ARIN Whois is a violation of ARIN’s 
registration services agreement (which provides for more significant recourse 
such as resource revocation), but ARIN is simply suspending access to the Whois 
service as that action directly corresponds to (and helps mitigate) the 
specific terms of use violation.

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers


Reply via email to