Philip Smith wrote:
I certainly believe that this policy proposal needs to be implemented if
APNIC is to remain in its position of registering the use of IPv4
address resources. As we all know, IPv4 address space is already
"bought" and "sold" commercially, so this is a first step at actually
legitimising these transfers. Transfers without records of these
transfers makes it harder for ISPs to trust prefix announcements.
However, I feel the principle of the policy needs to go further:
- incorporate NIRs, as NIRs are *not* independent resource registries
but are part of the APNIC family
- allow LIR members of other RIRs to participate too.
But one small step at a time; I feel this proposal is the correct first
step forward...
One aspect of the amended policy which may make it easier to incorporate
a wider community of participation in such a framework of recognition of
address transfers is the following text:
In order to preserve aggregation capabilities the transfer
recipient may notify APNIC that the transferred address may be
returned to the unallocated APNIC address pool, and a different
address of the same size may be registered to the recipient of
the transfer. This option would be available to the recipient of
the transferred address, at the discretion of the recipient.
This would allow, for example, an address prefix to be returned to one
registry point and an equivalent prefix assigned from another registry
point without having to make a series of 'upstream' changes to move the
actual address across registry points, whether they may be NIRs, LIRs or
other RIRs.
It assumes, however, that there is a certain amount of residual
'liquidity' in the registry pools to achieve this, which is not
something which can be assured right now.
regards,
Geoff