If we have less but more productive meetings, more people will participate. Moreover, most of the time is even cheaper traveling abroad than for example within Europe ... And in any case, the people really interested, will do it anyway. More concretely, the people (not just a few) that actually attend the several RIRs meetings, will save some resources. Regards, Jordi ---- Original Message ---- From: <Michael.Dillon@radianz.com> To: <address-policy-wg@ripe.net> Sent: Friday, July 02, 2004 1:08 PM Subject: Re: [address-policy-wg] IPv6 Policy Clarification - Initial allocation criteria "d)"
Actually I'm even starting to doubt about the effectiveness of having different RIRs. It will not be simple to have a single entity, with different local offices, with localized training plans, etc., but single global policy ?
Sounds like the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. It was definitely simpler but it simply did not work in the long run. The real world is too fluid; simple static theoretical approaches usually do not work.
In the stormy seas of policy and politics, we need a calming influence to keep things under control and the current RIR system does this. A single global policy might lead us to something like this:
http://www.offbeattours.co.nz/photo/18.htm
But I think this:
http://www.axonhost.com/active/crazywind/sailing/Log7-13.htm
is good enough.
One suggestion I made several times is that instead of having 3 regional meetings per year, we should have less regional meetings and 1 Global RIRs (all the members) meeting. This meeting can move each year to a different region and I'm sure will be very good to actually help to build a global policy.
The RIR regions are already quite large geographically. That's why a lot of people don't participate in the regional meetings unless it comes very close to them. That's also why RIPE NCC has had special meetings in Russia and Dubai and Kenya. If we started to have global meetings even fewer people would attend them. And most of the people who would attend a global meeting already go to ARIN, RIPE, APNIC meetings.
We need to avoid applying engineering solutions and techniques to problems of policy and politics.
--Michael Dillon
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