The Discussion Period for the proposal 2012-08, "Publication of Sponsoring LIR for Independent Number Resources", has been extended until 1 March 2013.
the proposal lists three supporting arguments:
This mechanism provides a simple means for End Users to identify with which sponsoring organisation they have a contractual link, in the case this information is unknown to the End User.
This appears overly artificial to me: why would an End User not know who they contracted with and why is a public listing of this information the appropriate cure? I do not buy this argument.
This policy simplifies the mechanism for verification and co-ordination between sponsoring organisations when an End User wishes to transfer resources from one sponsoring organisation to another.
This is a derivative of the first argument, even though it does not state the nature of the envisioned 'verification and co-ordination'. It is the End User's job to make available, where necessary, the supporting documentation. I do not buy this argument.
Publishing this information provides an additional means for tackling abuse issues on the Internet.
So, "if all else fails", we claim it will help fighting "abuse"? What is the underlying expectation here? Is a 'sponsoring LIR' in any way responsible for traffic generated (or sunk) at the 'sponsored' address space? I cannot buy this argument. Since the proposal does not list any valid supporting argument, I am opposed. -Peter