It’s a shame, a company with fraudulent methods receive 1 million IP address for next three months but my company after giving all requested statics will receive /22 subnet instead of at least /14 subnet!!!
Hi Hamed,
Yes, it's a lottery!
Sorry that you didn't win.
I didn't either, tried to get a PI out. :) But didn't get it.
Best,
Martin
On Fri, 2012-09-14 at 18:47 +0430, Hamed Shafaghi wrote:
> It’s a shame, a company with fraudulent methods receive 1 million IP
> address for next three months but my company after giving all
> requested statics will receive /22 subnet instead of at least /14
> subnet!!!
>
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 6:37 PM, Martin Millnert <millnert@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> On Fri, 2012-09-14 at 15:56 +0200, Tore Anderson wrote:
> > The delegated-ripencc-extended-latest shows which blocks
> were free at the start of the day, then it's just a matter of
> some whois queries to figure out the rest.
> >
> > Right now it seems 128.0.107.0-128.0.111.255 are still free,
> plus those five /24s out of 192/8 I listed earlier. And maybe
> those /25+es (didn't check as I'm on the road at the moment).
> So it's pretty much all gone now.
> >
> > Tore
>
>
> Right, as per the announcements [1][2] as well, we're
> officially in
> final /8 land now, and IPRAs ran the "available pool" down to
> the
> ground.
>
> So, somewhere between 35-60M EUR locked up for the RIPE NCC
> now, from
> one-shot-LIRs, with current policy. Does the RIPE NCC need all
> this
> money or will that complicate things, especially w.r.t IPv4 as
> an asset
> issues? Or does it matter what we do?
>
> IPv4 just became an asset in this land regardless. :-)
>
> Best,
> Martin
>
> [1]
> http://www.ripe.net/ripe/mail/archives/ncc-announce/2012-September/000615.html
> [2]
> https://www.ripe.net/internet-coordination/news/ripe-ncc-begins-to-allocate-ipv4-address-space-from-the-last-8
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> I Hamed Shafaghi I
> I Managing Director I
>