Re: [address-policy-wg] 2007-01 Last Call for Comments (Direct Internet Resource Assignments to End Users from the RIPE NCC)
address-policy-wg-admin@ripe.net wrote on 08/04/2008 16:29:22:
Frederic <frederic@placenet.org> Sent by: address-policy-wg-admin@ripe.net
08/04/08 16:29
To
Ian.Meikle@nominet.org.uk
cc
address-policy-wg@ripe.net
Subject
Re: [address-policy-wg] 2007-01 Last Call for Comments (Direct Internet Resource Assignments to End Users from the RIPE NCC)
Leo Vegoda <leo.vegoda@icann.org> Sent by: address-policy-wg-admin@ripe.net
08/04/08 13:29
To
Frederic <frederic@placenet.org>, Shane Kerr <shane@time-travellers.org>
cc
Max Tulyev <president@ukraine.su>, "address-policy-wg@ripe.net" <address-policy-wg@ripe.net>
Subject
Re: [address-policy-wg] 2007-01 Last Call for Comments (Direct Internet Resource Assignments to End Users from the RIPE NCC)
Hi Frederic,
On 08/04/2008 03:58, "Frederic" <frederic@placenet.org> wrote:
[...]
why is broken ? because Ripe do not implement relation between PI holder thru Database information.
Dead PI is like Dead Domain name.
This is a fairly good analogy. My understanding of domain names is
they
are normally delegated according to a contract with a registry or registrar. If the contract ends the delegation is removed.
There is a thriving market in 'dead' domain names. Several of our registrars base their business models around buying them and reviving
For this to work they need to have a contract with us, and they need to
Le mardi 08 avril 2008 à 16:09 +0100, Ian.Meikle@nominet.org.uk a écrit : that them. pay
a fee per domain name.
However, the leverage we have is that the contract on a domain name is time limited, with on option to renew.
it is not true for all domain. and the "not for all" is important.
that why we do not support : contract for all RESSOURCE. let choice by change MUST by MAY.
Can you provide a counter example?
counter exemple for ? domain ? .st .nf or .eu.org. all are free. Free because 1$ some time is huge. no contract because everybody is not hijacker and all idea may be possible. bst regards. Frederic
Ian
frederic@placenet.org wrote: [..]
counter exemple for ? domain ?
.st .nf or .eu.org. all are free.
Free because 1$ some time is huge. no contract because everybody is not hijacker and all idea may be possible.
You might have noticed that eu.org is not a TLD. You can of course also get 'free' dyndns.org 'sub-domains' and a lot more funny ones. For all goes: there is no contract, thus they can, at any time, just delete "your" domain and you will have nothing to stand on. The primary reasons (afaik) that folks want PI is to be: - independence - be sure that they can keep the address space avoiding the need to change In your 'examples', you are not independent, as you rely on the service from those TLD's to a) work, b) remain free, c) remain available to you. Also you can't rely on it that those domains remain "yours", thus you will have to rename your whole domain when that happens. Unfortunately for you the Internet is not anymore that startup research network between a couple of schools. The Internet is commercial, and the Internet is global and has a lot of participants. To make sure that everybody is happy and can be kept happy, you will just have to sign a little contract and keep to it, and you will just have to pay a small fee for the maintenance. If you don't want either, then you will just have to use all the free alternatives, which don't provide you with the things you want. As for the whining about any fees at all, those fees are nothing compared to the hardware and transit costs you will have, especially when you will need to buy a really big new router when a lot of sites get PI, or do you expect all of that for free too? (if the answer is yes, then ask the people who sponsor those things to also sponsor the little bit of cash for the prefix) Greets, Jeroen
Le mardi 08 avril 2008 à 20:04 +0200, Jeroen Massar a écrit :
frederic@placenet.org wrote: [..]
counter exemple for ? domain ?
.st .nf or .eu.org. all are free.
Free because 1$ some time is huge. no contract because everybody is not hijacker and all idea may be possible.
You might have noticed that eu.org is not a TLD. You can of course also get 'free' dyndns.org 'sub-domains' and a lot more funny ones.
For all goes: there is no contract, thus they can, at any time, just delete "your" domain and you will have nothing to stand on.
The primary reasons (afaik) that folks want PI is to be: - independence - be sure that they can keep the address space avoiding the need to change
In your 'examples', you are not independent, as you rely on the service from those TLD's to a) work, b) remain free, c) remain available to you. Also you can't rely on it that those domains remain "yours", thus you will have to rename your whole domain when that happens.
You keep eu.org but you do not talk about .st and .nf. and eu.org was made because you do not have choice today with domain. and that why i do not want the same thing for IP. and like i said many time, is all the freedom to have other thing possible that the main stream.
Unfortunately for you the Internet is not anymore that startup research network between a couple of schools. The Internet is commercial, and the Internet is global and has a lot of participants. To make sure that everybody is happy and can be kept happy, you will just have to sign a little contract and keep to it, and you will just have to pay a small fee for the maintenance. If you don't want either, then you will just have to use all the free alternatives, which don't provide you with the things you want.
Today you have the possibility to do without contract. the 2007-1 say it's over ! All goes fine.
As for the whining about any fees at all, those fees are nothing compared to the hardware and transit costs you will have, especially when you will need to buy a really big new router when a lot of sites get PI, or do you expect all of that for free too? (if the answer is yes, then ask the people who sponsor those things to also sponsor the little bit of cash for the prefix)
False. LIR FEES is huge for a non profit company with vulunteer. and hardware and place in the internet are today not expensive. And when that was expensive you had not money for only administartive purpose. Main stream of the internet is commercial but today you have the possibility to do not follow this main stream. tomorrow is not possible because you have contract. Internet still works and works with gentlement agreement, and anyway you can hijack youtube's PA with the LIR status.... bst regards. Frederic
Greets, Jeroen
Frederic wrote: [..]
You keep eu.org but you do not talk about .st and .nf.
Actually I ignore eu.org completely, as it is just a subdomain and talked mostly about the rest. There are several, probably thousands, of such domains where you can get a subdomain for free. All without a requirement to pay or any contract, except their rules. Anyone remember ml.org? Indeed, they don't exist anymore either. http://everything2.com/index.pl?node=ml.org still has a small recording about this.
and eu.org was made because you do not have choice today with domain. and that why i do not want the same thing for IP.
As you are so persistent in your analogy and don't seem to get the point where your analogy is wrong, lets try another way: There is a *FREE* way for you to get an IPv6 block, just get a tunnel from one of the several IPv6 Tunnel Brokers out there. They will provide you, for free, one or even multiple /48's to your site. You are free to use them, though under the conditions they set, just like your 'eu.org' and 'nf' 'st' etc domains. They also take care of the routing, the transit and everything, all for free. The trick is, you can't/should not announce that /48 into BGP though, as that is their conditions. Also you do not have any rights whatsoever for that /48, it can go any time you want. Because of them handling the routing, and them deciding you can keep the domain^Wsubnet, you are dependent, just like DNS, on them and their service to keep on existing and providing it to you. If you want something for free, the conditions are also free, anything can happen. If you have a contract though, that contract defines what can happen.
and like i said many time, is all the freedom to have other thing possible that the main stream.
The above example 'preserves' your freedom, though it locks you in, just like those TLD's and eu.org to their rules. You are btw absolutely not independent with those domains, you are fully dependent on what they decide to do with their domain and if they even keep it running or allow you to use it. There is no contact thus no guarantees, if you have a contract you have something to come back at. Maybe you should start to understand that IP are not domain names.
As for the whining about any fees at all, those fees are nothing compared to the hardware and transit costs you will have, especially when you will need to buy a really big new router when a lot of sites get PI, or do you expect all of that for free too? (if the answer is yes, then ask the people who sponsor those things to also sponsor the little bit of cash for the prefix)
False. LIR FEES is huge for a non profit company with vulunteer.
Get better sponsors for your project, or just fit in with what everybody else does. If your project is not that important to get good enough sponsors you do not need to have PI either.
and hardware and place in the internet are today not expensive. And when that was expensive you had not money for only administartive purpose.
As mentioned, if/when routing tables explode, your cheap hardware won't work anymore as it all has to be replaced. You will the first one to be then cut off that nice Internet. Does PI help then? You still won't have the money to actually connect to it and actually use it. What exactly are the requirements for which you require PI anyway? As you don't seem to be able to understand the difference between domain names and IP addresses, maybe you are just misinformed and you should be consulted so that you understand the other possibilities that you have for solving your problem.
Main stream of the internet is commercial but today you have the possibility to do not follow this main stream.
tomorrow is not possible because you have contract.
That is called evolution. 2000 years ago you could have occupied the US yourself and made yourself president. Now everything is owned by somebody else. Change happens. Either you go along, or you stick to your little rock.
Internet still works and works with gentlement agreement, and anyway you can hijack youtube's PA with the LIR status....
I would say: go for it. It doesn't take long for you to disappear from the Internet then. A lot of people don't like other people messing with their networks. Greets, Jeroen
Internet still works and works with gentlement agreement, and anyway you can hijack youtube's PA with the LIR status....
I would say: go for it.
It doesn't take long for you to disappear from the Internet then. A lot of people don't like other people messing with their networks.
yes of course, so contract change nothing for a correct relationship. gentleman agreement works fine. i talk about domain for procedure to keep in touch with the holder. and after about why some domain are free (no contract and no fees), the must important is free to USE (because no contract). of course IP are not domain. i explain that is interesting to have the possiblity to have relationship with ripe when your are an internet ressource holder without to be be a LIR. but i would have the choice and let the choice to other. The contract of ripe will be interesting because you will have choice to say yes or no. if you need PI and after you grow, you can become LIR and change you PI with PA and like this have a contract with RIPE. so please forget the part : money. thing about the possibility to have choice do not restrict all internet ressource to an unique contract. bst regards. Frederic
Greets, Jeroen
Frederic wrote:
Internet still works and works with gentlement agreement, and anyway you can hijack youtube's PA with the LIR status.... I would say: go for it.
It doesn't take long for you to disappear from the Internet then. A lot of people don't like other people messing with their networks.
yes of course, so contract change nothing for a correct relationship. gentleman agreement works fine.
With a contract somebody can sue you, with a "gentlemans agreement" one can't. What is your opposition to contracts at all? You will have to set up several contracts anyway already: - Sponsors - Connectivity provider (L2) - Connectivity provider (L3) - Datacenter, or separate: Power, Cooling etc - Security and a lot more. You do set up those, but you don't want them for a bit of address space. Odd. What do you have to worry about, that a contract doesn't suit you?
i talk about domain for procedure to keep in touch with the holder.
and after about why some domain are free (no contract and no fees), the must important is free to USE (because no contract).
As mentioned, when you get free stuff, it is not you who decided on how to use it.
of course IP are not domain.
i explain that is interesting to have the possiblity to have relationship with ripe when your are an internet ressource holder without to be be a LIR.
And to do that you will need to sign a contract with RIPE. You will be liable and responsible for the address block that you might receive. This all under the conditions set forth by the community.
but i would have the choice and let the choice to other. The contract of ripe will be interesting because you will have choice to say yes or no.
You have a simple two way choice: - you sign a contract and get your PI - you don't sign a contract and you don't.
if you need PI and after you grow, you can become LIR and change you PI with PA and like this have a contract with RIPE.
PI can't be converted to PA. PI is for end-sites. PA is for ISP's who provide aggregated connectivity to end-sites. What where your requirements again for all of this? Greets, Jeroen
You have a simple two way choice: - you sign a contract and get your PI - you don't sign a contract and you don't.
Today is not true. the 2007-1 change what is possible today. Today if i justify to receive a PI, i have it without any Contractual Obligation. i add information in ripe database and update it.
if you need PI and after you grow, you can become LIR and change you PI with PA and like this have a contract with RIPE.
PI can't be converted to PA. PI is for end-sites. PA is for ISP's who provide aggregated connectivity to end-sites.
and PI may be a step before PA...
What where your requirements again for all of this?
the problem is to put a new restriction. the 2007-1 say: NOW when you want any internet ressource you MUST be contract with the , agree with the ripe etc... you can not imagine ALL possibility and you must not say now is like this and no way for the other. we would like let a choice, yes a little choice for a little window... we beleive that a step : MAY be established before MUST Be established, let ripe to proposal best contract to interest organisation that today has no contract for their own reason... (politacal, technic....what ever i do not know. but i not judge to say if it is good or bad, or it must be like this than like that.) bst regards. Frederic
Greets, Jeroen
On 09/04/2008 06:23, "Frederic" <frederic@placenet.org> wrote: [...]
Today if i justify to receive a PI, i have it without any Contractual Obligation.
Can you please explain why you are concerned about contractual obligations? The current system is slightly ambiguous and it could be argued that this places registrants in a risky situation. The RIPE NCC could act capriciously, or make a mistake, and revoke an assignment. The (now ex) registrant would be at a disadvantage when they sought redress. I personally think the scenario described above is very unlikely but nonetheless, it is a possibility. In my opinion, introducing contracts is as much about protecting the registrant as it is about protecting the RIPE NCC and the community of network operators. Regards, Leo Vegoda
Hi, Op 9 apr 2008, om 13:24 heeft Jeroen Massar het volgende geschreven:
of course IP are not domain. i explain that is interesting to have the possiblity to have relationship with ripe when your are an internet ressource holder without to be be a LIR.
And to do that you will need to sign a contract with RIPE.
Important note: it is preferred that you have a contract with an LIR for your PI space. If you can't or won't do that, you can have a contract with RIPE NCC directly. The intention is to do as much as possible throught the existing LIR structure. Because it is provider independent, switching between LIRs is ofcourse not a problem. It is not the intention to force everyone to have a contract directly with the RIPE NCC. As Axel pointed out in the last RIPE meeting, this would lead to an unwanted situation. There is still freedom for the end user in choosing the LIR to do business with. Sander Steffann
.st .nf or .eu.org. all are free. You keep eu.org but you do not talk about .st and .nf.
In fact, .st and .nf are not free. Check http://www.nic.st and https://secure.nf/ if you don't believe me. At the .nf registry you have to do a name search and click "Register" to see the prices. Anything that simplifies the chain of contractual relationships, like 2007-01, is a good policy. Since it is optional, it means that end users who already contract for other services from an LIR, can continue to maintain their IP addressing relationship with the LIR. But there are other end users with IP addresses who do not have a need for any other services from an LIR. It does not make sense to force them to contract with an LIR for only this one service, which is NEVER the core business of the LIR. That's why 2007-01 is a good proposal since it allows these end users to contract directly with RIPE where IP addressing *IS* the core business. --Michael Dillon
participants (6)
-
Frederic
-
frederic@placenet.org
-
Jeroen Massar
-
Leo Vegoda
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michael.dillon@bt.com
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Sander Steffann