In a message written on Tue, Sep 18, 2012 at 09:11:50PM -0700, Mike Hale wrote: > I'd love to hear the reasoning for this. Why would it be bad policy > to force companies to use the resources they are assigned or give them > back to the general pool?
While I personally think ARIN should do more to flush out addresses that are actually _not in use at all_, the danger here is very clear. Forcing the return of address space that is in use but not in the "global default free routing table" is making a value judgement about the use of that address space. Basically it is the community saying that using public address space for private, but possibly interconnected networks is not a worthy use of the space. For a few years the community tried to force name based virtual hosting on the hosting industry, rather than burning one IP address per host. That also was a value judegment that turned out to not be so practical, as people use more than plain HTTP in the hosting world. The sippery slope argument is where does this hunt for "underutilized" space stop? Disconnected networks are bad? Name based hosting is required? Carrier grade NAT is required for end user networks? More importantly are the RIR's set up to make these value judgements about the usage as they get more and more subjective? There's also a ROI problem. People smarter than I have done the math, and figured out that if X% of the address space can be reclaimed via these efforts, that gains Y years of address space. Turns out Y is pretty darn small no matter how agressive the search for underutilized space. Basically the RIR's would have to spin up more staff and, well, harass pretty much every IP holder for a couple of years just to delay the transition to IPv6 by a couple of years. In the short term moving the date a couple of years may seem like a win, but in the long term its really insignificant. It's also important to note that RIR's are paid for by the users, the ramp up in staff and legal costs of such and effort falls back on the community. Is delaying IPv6 adoption worth having RIR fees double? If the policy to get companies to look at and return such resources had been investigated 10-15 years ago it might have been something that could have been done in a reasonable way with some positive results. It wasn't though, and rushing that effort now just doesn't make a meaningful difference in the IPv4->IPv6 transition, particularly given the pain of a rushed implementation. -- Leo Bicknell - bickn...@ufp.org - CCIE 3440 PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/
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