On Wed, Feb 06, 2002 at 09:38:46AM -0700, Alec H. Peterson wrote: Alec, all,
The issue that I and many other people on the ARIN AC continue to come back to is that this sounds a lot like the logic that was used when deciding how to originally allocate IPv4 address space.
Nobody wants to be the "640k is enough for anybody" advocate, and you're quite right to suggest that if we get this wrong, there will be unfortunate consequences for everyone. However, there is clearly a tension between the urgent requirement that some people have /today/, /now/, for address space, and the policy convergence of checks and balances that the RIRs would like to see. With all due respect, and I have a lot of respect for the RIR people, we have been talking about IPv6 policies for years, and working together across continents is difficult. Surely we should not be concentrating so ferociously on not getting it wrong, and instead concentrate on refining towards the right? Niall -- Enigma Consulting Limited: Security, UNIX and telecommunications consultants. Address: Floor 2, 45 Dawson Street, Dublin 2, Ireland. http://www.enigma.ie/