* Gert Doering
On Mon, Oct 24, 2022 at 04:02:19AM -0700, Leo Vegoda wrote:
As I read the proposal, it is intended to allow LIRs to prune the records they believe do not add value. It would enable discretion, rather than blind obedience. Is that a negative? If so, why?
This puts an enormous amount of trust on the LIR, of which we have manythousands, in all sorts of experience and responsibility levels.
If I, as a LIR contact, choose to decide "this is only work for me, it adds no value for me", I can use that argument to put no records at all whatsoever into the RIPE DB, no?
... which would be absolutely contrary to one of the fundamental pillars of address policy "registration where the addresses are".
I never quite understood why we appear to be totally OK with not requiring each individual IPv6 customer assignment to be registered in the database, while we continue to require it for IPv4. In IPv6, LIRs may create an status:AGGREGATED-BY-LIR inet6num, essentially saying something like «in this block there are a gazillion end users, and I am the tech/abuse contact for all of them». In IPv4, there is no such option. The LIR is required by policy to create a gazillion individual status:ASSIGNED inetnums instead, all containing the exact same contact info. These do not add any value though, they're just a PITA to maintain. Is there any particular reason why we can't simply "backport" status:AGGREGATED-BY-LIR to IPv4? Tore