W dniu 2014-07-03 00:22, Elvis Daniel Velea pisze:
I would say that it is only dangerous if you have never done business before. You should never pay in advance for something that you have not yet received. Various types of Escrow agreements or Bank Guarantee Letters are used, usually, when an IPv4 allocation is transferred. These are processes that do not involve the RIPE NCC but which make the transfers happen. Brokers are happy to assist with these processes.
What do you say about situation: you bought, the transfers are made successfully, you paid after transfers, and suddenly after 8-12 months after transaction you see deletion and revert on the objects, because RIPE says that they were sold by a cheater. RIPE is not trying to help, they only said, that is because a due diligence process. My question is, where was the due diligence *during* the transfer?
Any new LIR will receive a /22 allocation as long as they can justify the use of at least one IP address. The policy is very simple in this regard.
Again - this is not obvious. What about a situation that you are paying for setting up a LIR and then you do not get allocation, even though you show its need? And in the dispute you get the answer: "By signing the RIPE NCC Standard Service Agreement you only become a member. The membership fee covers the membership alone. Whether you receive an IP allocation is being separately reviewed." Regards Tomasz Slaski