There is nothing in that statement that precludes apnic members from leasing out their space. Nor is there anything in policy that prevents it. I participated in that discussion on the transfer list and I suggest everybody review it carefully.

 In this case apnic staff continues  to muddy the waters by conflating justification fraud  with the act of leasing already acquired addresses. I note we do not have any word on Jordi's prior assertion that a fundamental change in usage  renders the address block revocable.

Will apnic staff forbid the creation of an ROA by a member which includes the AS number they do not own?

Under which policy will Apnic staff forbid the creation of such ROAs, as the secretariat threatened?

 An APNIC member has every right under contract and policy to change the use of his addresses and also to lease them out. Please please do not conflate the final /8 policies and justification fraud with actual leasing.  Fraud in justification has always been punishable in every registry. It's not the issue here.

Regards,

Mike





---- On Tue, 23 Aug 2022 07:51:50 -0400 fhfrediani@gmail.com wrote ----

Thanks for the clarification.
The makes it very clear that what we are doing is just willing to make something that *already exist* clear in the policy text, for the avoidance of doubt of all members and fair usage of allocated resources by APNIC to those who really justify the need.

Fernando

On 23/08/2022 07:35, Srinivas (Sunny) Chendi wrote:
Hi Jordi,

Please see our comments inline...

On 23/08/2022 9:40 am, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:

Hi Mike,

 

 

 

 

 

 

In at least, LACNIC and AFRINIC, it has been made clear by staff, that leasing is not a valid justification for getting resources, *THE SAME as in APNIC*, so if you use that as a justification, the request is denied. If you change the “usage” after the request is passed, then you’re bypassing the original justification, which is also *disallowed*.

 

I will let the secretariat to confirm if leasing is allowed or not, actually responding to your points on APNIC policies, even if this policy doesn't reach consensus. However, in my opinion the policy manual must be clear enough so nobody can interpret that something is not allowed when actually is not.


The same topic was discussed on the apnic-transfers mailing list sometime in June this year.
https://mailman.apnic.net/hyperkitty/list/apnic-transfers@apnic.net/thread/PDLAJK2JMT5RPILF4VZFH55PL4ROP5GG/

I'm copying and pasting my colleague Vivek's response here.

<quote>
APNIC delegates IP addresses to Members based on their demonstrated need. What Members can do with that address space once it is no longer needed is impacted by policy requirements. I will provide two examples.

Example 1: Addresses delegated from the last /8 pool cannot be transferred for a minimum of five years. During that time, if the reason for the original request is no longer valid, the resources must be returned to APNIC.
https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/resources#8.0.-IPv4-Transfers
https://www.apnic.net/community/policy/resources#4.0.-Resource-License

So in this instance, if a Member leases out their IP addresses within five years of receiving the delegation from APNIC, they are clearly not needed for their original declared purpose and must be returned to APNIC.

Example 2: For addresses delegated to a Member more than five years ago, if a Member no longer has the need for the address space, APNIC policy says the Member can choose to transfer it to another organization or return it to APNIC. APNIC policy does not have provisions for leasing. So in the second example, APNIC Members leasing addresses would be doing so outside the policy framework and will not receive APNIC services such as whois registration and RPKI/ROA access related to those addresses. This in turn may make it difficult to freely utilise those addresses on the Internet, due to lack of clear authorisation and a reliance on the registered holder (lessor) to assist. Of course, if the addresses being leased were not delegated by APNIC, then the relevant RIR’s policies apply to those addresses.
<unquote>

Regards,
Sunny
APNIC Secretariat


 

 

Regards,

Jordi

@jordipalet

 

 

 

El 22/8/22, 12:17, "Mike Burns" <mike@iptrading.com> escribió:

 

There are a number of problems with this policy.

 

First let’s start with Jordi stating the policy is just a clarification of fact.

If so, why is it necessary? Actually it is not a fact as leasing is occurring in APNIC and there is nothing in policy preventing it.  So this needs to be considered as a change in policy.

 

Second, there are inaccuracies in the verbiage associated with the policy, particularly in reference to the status of leasing at other RIRs.  How can you make the statement “ In other RIRs, the leasing of addresses is not authorized either and since it is not explicit in their policy manuals…”?

 

Are you unilaterally deciding that things which are not mentioned in policy are by definition “unauthorized”? I think this is wrong, and it’s better to consider things as authorized unless they are forbidden by policy.  However, either way there is no language in any RIR regarding leasing and you can’t make assumptions based on your own feelings.

 

You are also wrong in stating that “Nothing is currently mentioned in RIPE about this and it is not acceptable as a justification of the need.” In actual fact, RIPE will accept leased-out addresses as justification of need in the only case where RIPE actually has a needs test, and that is with inter-regional transfers sourced in ARIN.  It bears remembering that RIPE simply has no needs test for transfers and this has been the policy for many years.  You may wonder what the point of a needs-test for transfers is, since the recipients are paying for the addresses.

 

ARIN staff has made it known that leasing addresses is not against policy at all, but leased-out addresses can’t be used to justify transfers. However a policy explicitly allowing leased-out addresses to be used as justification is under consideration.

 

Also leases can be used to justify addresses in ARIN if any tiny connectivity is created between the lessor and lessee. For example, a small VPN can be created, even though it carries no (or nearly no) traffic. If you want to get technical, the lessor and the lessee both advertise the block, but the lessor advertises a longer and more expensive route than the lessee, who will receive all the traffic except for any loose packets that find their way to the lessor, who will send them down the tunnel to the lessee.

 

The issue of retention of a needs test should be reconsidered by the APNIC community in the face of evidence garnered from the RIPE experiment. RIPE has had no needs test and APNIC had also removed the needs-test for transfers but only restored it at the behest of ARIN, who at the time was the only source for desperate APNIC members faced with APNIC exhaust.  Now there are other sources for inter-regional transfers to APNIC, and APNIC can take the path of RIPE in performing needs test only for inbound ARIN transfers so that source would not be precluded. So why not return to APNIC’s previous position of removing the needs test from transfers?

 

Leasing is a natural progression of the IPv4 market that provides benefits to both lessee and lessor, and that is why it is inevitable and why it exists today.  There are those who hold unused addresses but who don’t want to sell for some reason. There are those who need IPv4 but who can’t afford to pay for it all at once. There are those with a temporary need. Leasing is the answer for the smaller organizations that need IPv4. There are no addresses left in the free pool, so it’s either buy or lease. No other options.

 

Today APNIC (and ARIN and RIPE) will allow existing address holders to lease their blocks to non-connected customers. This is not a policy violation and addresses can’t be revoked for reasons of utilization or non-utilization. I believe that contra this policy, leasing should be authorized explicitly and that leased out addresses in-use on an operational network should logically be accepted as justification, because does it really matter whose network they are used on? Isn’t the salient point that they are in use?

 

I am against this policy.

 

Regards,
Mike Burns

 

 

 

 

 

 

From: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ via sig-policy <sig-policy@lists.apnic.net>
Sent: Monday, August 22, 2022 9:21 AM
To: Srinivas (Sunny) Chendi <sunny@apnic.net>; sig-policy@lists.apnic.net
Subject: [sig-policy] Re: prop-148-v001: Leasing of Resources is not Acceptable

 

Hi Sunny, all,

 

In my opinion because the policy is just a clarification of a fact, it doesn’t change the situation for non-LIR/ISP account holders. Further to that, direct assignments from APNIC can’t be further sub-assigned, so clearly this disallows any type of “business” with addresses for those account holders. Do you think that’s sufficiently clear or do you think a small text clarification in the proposal is needed?

 

Regarding your 2nd point, there is not already a generic contact email to let know APNIC if anything is wrong regarding policy compliance? It will be surprising that today anyone discovers some breach and can’t report it, so this will also apply the same to this proposal. Again, if you believe a text clarification is needed, we can make a new version for that.

 

Finally, regarding your 3rd question, in my understanding the policy manual apply to *all the resources* unless we state otherwise. So not only those after being implemented are subjected to this proposal. And once more, the proposal is only a clarification, not changing what is the current reality. Anyway, we are happy to state it more clearly if needed.

 

Tks!

 

Regards,

Jordi

@jordipalet

 

 

El 22/8/22, 2:45, "Srinivas (Sunny) Chendi" <sunny@apnic.net> escribió:

 

Hi all,

This is the secretariat's impact assessment for prop-148-v001, which is also
available on the proposal page.

    http://www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-148

APNIC notes that this proposal suggests explicitly stating in the APNIC
Internet Number Resources policy document that leasing of IP addresses is
not permitted in the APNIC region.

Clarifications:

Is this proposal restricted to LIRs/ISPs, or does it apply to all APNIC
account holders?

The proposal does not specify how an APNIC investigation should be initiated.
Should there be a form to report this, similar to IRT escalation?

Does this proposal apply to all existing allocations or only those delegated
after the policy is implemented?

Implementation:

This proposal may require changes to the system.

If this proposal reaches consensus, implementation may be completed within
3 months.

Regards,
Sunny
APNIC Secretariat

On 11/08/2022 5:01 pm, chku wrote:

Dear SIG members,
 
The proposal "prop-148: Leasing of Resources is not Acceptable" has been 
sent to the Policy SIG for review.
 
It will be presented at the Open Policy Meeting (OPM) at APNIC 54 on 
Thursday, 15 September 2022.
 
    https://conference.apnic.net/54/program/schedule/#/day/8
 
We invite you to review and comment on the proposal on the mailing list 
before the OPM.
 
The comment period on the mailing list before the OPM is an important 
part of the Policy Development Process (PDP). We encourage you to 
express your views on the proposal:
 
  - Do you support or oppose this proposal?
  - Does this proposal solve a problem you are experiencing? If so,
    tell the community about your situation.
  - Do you see any disadvantages in this proposal?
  - Is there anything in the proposal that is not clear?
  - What changes could be made to this proposal to make it more effective?
 
Information about this proposal is appended below as well as available at:
 
    http://www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-148
 
Regards,
Bertrand, Shaila, and Ching-Heng
APNIC Policy SIG Chairs
 
---------------------------------------------------------------
 
prop-148-v001: Leasing of Resources is not Acceptable
 
----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Proposer: Jordi Palet Martinez (jordi.palet@theipv6company.comAnupam)
          Amrita Choudhury (amritachoudhury@ccaoi.in)
          Fernando Frediani (fhfredani@gmail.com)
 
 
1. Problem statement
--------------------
RIRs have been conceived to manage, allocate and assign resources according to need, in such way that a LIR/ISP has addresses to be able to directly connect its customers based on justified need. Addresses are not, therefore, a property with which to trade or do business.
 
When the justification of the need disappears or changes, for whatever reasons, the expected thing would be to return said addresses to the RIR, otherwise according to Section 4.1. (“The original basis of the delegation remains valid”) and 4.1.2. (“Made for a specific purpose that no longer exists, or based on information that is later found to be false or incomplete”) of the policy manual, APNIC is not enforced to renew the license. An alternative is to transfer these resources using the appropriate transfer policy.
 
If the leasing of addresses is authorized, contrary to the original spirit of the policies and the very existence of the RIRs, the link between connectivity and addresses disappears, which also poses security problems, since, in the absence of connectivity, the resource holder who has received the license to use the addresses does not have immediate physical control to manage/filter them, which can cause damage to the entire community.
 
Therefore, it should be made explicit in the Policies that the Internet Resources should not be leased "per se", but only as part of a direct connectivity service.
 
The existing policies of APNIC are not explicit about that, however current policies do not regard the leasing of addresses as acceptable, if they are not an integral part of a connectivity service. Specifically, the justification of the need would not be valid for those blocks of addresses whose purpose is not to directly connect customers of an LIR/ISP, and consequently the renewal of the annual license for the use of the addresses would not be valid either. Sections 3.2.6. (Address ownership), 3.2.7. (Address stockpiling) and 3.2.8. (Reservations not supported) of the policy manual, are keys on this issue, but an explicit clarification is required.
 
 
2. Objective of policy change
-----------------------------
Despite the fact that the intention in this regard underlies the entire Policy Manual text and is thus applied to justify the need for resources, this proposal makes this aspect explicit by adding the appropriate clarifying text.
 
 
3. Situation in other regions
-----------------------------
In other RIRs, the leasing of addresses is not authorized either and since it is not explicit in their policy manuals either, this proposal will be presented as well.
 
Nothing is currently mentioned in RIPE about this and it is not acceptable as a justification of the need. In AFRINIC and LACNIC, the staff has confirmed that address leasing is not considered as valid for the justification. In ARIN it is not considered valid as justification of need.
 
A similar proposal is under discussion in LACNIC and ARIN.
 
4. Proposed policy solution
---------------------------
5.8. Leasing of Internet Number Resources
 
In the case of Internet number resources, the justification of the need implies the need to directly connect customers. As a result, any form of IP address leasing is not considered acceptable, nor does it justify the need, if it is not part of a set of services based, at the very least, on direct connectivity. Even for networks that are not connected to the Internet, leasing of IP addresses is not permitted, because such sites can request direct assignments from APNIC or the relevant NIR and, in the case of IPv4, use private addresses or arrange market transfers.
 
If any form of leasing is confirmed by an APNIC investigation, APNIC may revoke the IP resources of account holders who are leasing or using them for any purposes not specified in the initial request.
 
This includes, but not limited to, the following: 
 - Removing delegations from the Whois database.
 - Removing related ROAs.
 - Stop providing APNIC services.
 
Members of the NIR are subject to the same policy.
 
 
5. Advantages / Disadvantages
-----------------------------
Advantages:
Fulfilling the objective above indicated and making the policy clear.
 
Disadvantages:
None.
 
 
6. Impact on resource holders
-----------------------------
None.
 
 
7. References
-------------
https://aus01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.arin.net%2Fparticipate%2Fpolicy%2Fproposals%2F2022%2FARIN_prop_308_v2%2F&amp;data=05%7C01%7C%7C10362f529b0e4536949408da7b677a41%7C127d8d0d7ccf473dab096e44ad752ded%7C0%7C0%7C637957981611076664%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&amp;sdata=uhhDD0kaOyJOxHiWa7Z%2BckfPwe9ohLQsidzS9u4BUHo%3D&amp;reserved=0
https://aus01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpoliticas.lacnic.net%2Fpoliticas%2Fdetail%2Fid%2FLAC-2022-2%2Flanguage%2Fen&amp;data=05%7C01%7C%7C10362f529b0e4536949408da7b677a41%7C127d8d0d7ccf473dab096e44ad752ded%7C0%7C0%7C637957981611076664%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&amp;sdata=p7nZJRM2zzi2kBOyLeSA%2BOo1qGTU1rBB3VIvQoaLYz0%3D&amp;reserved=0
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-- 
 
_______________________________________________________________________
 
Srinivas (Sunny) Chendi (he/him)
Senior Advisor - Policy and Community Development
 
Asia Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC) |  Tel: +61 7 3858 3100
PO Box 3646 South Brisbane, QLD 4101 Australia  |  Fax: +61 7 3858 3199
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_______________________________________________________________________

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Asia Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC) |  Tel: +61 7 3858 3100
PO Box 3646 South Brisbane, QLD 4101 Australia  |  Fax: +61 7 3858 3199
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