No, but they can sure send them a bill and then go after them for collections when they don't pay it. -----Original Message----- From: christopher.morrow@gmail.com [mailto:christopher.morrow@gmail.com] On Behalf Of Christopher Morrow Sent: Tuesday, April 21, 2009 8:34 PM To: Shane Ronan Cc: nanog list Subject: Re: The real issue On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 11:26 PM, Shane Ronan <sronan@fattoc.com> wrote:
Very simple, just do it.
On Apr 21, 2009, at 7:59 PM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 10:46 PM, Shane Ronan <sronan@fattoc.com> wrote:
It's means one of two things:
sure, but 'how' exactly?
1) Recoup the unused space for paid reallocation or
arin never (nor do any RIR) guarantee routability, nor do they even a method to affect routability of a network.
2) Have the current "owner" pay the market rate for the IP space
... that's somewhat hard since the current policies don't support that, and there is no real legal stance for legacy-allocations... For allocated post-legacy-times ARIN can start court proceedings, but ... that's a lengthy process and expensive.
-Chris
On Apr 21, 2009, at 7:37 PM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 10:21 PM, Shane Ronan <sronan@fattoc.com>
wrote:
Is ARIN, who won't even take back large blocks of space from
have long ago stopped using it and aren't paying anything for it,
This isn't nike... I'm sorry for being obtuse, but they (arin) can't really do anything. I suspect that if they had to prosecute all folks in violation of the RSA they would have financial issues... and it wouldn't really solve anything long term anyway. In short, ARIN can't affect routability ARIN can't effectively deal with the contract issues in a timely fashion So.. what are they going to 'just do'? -Chris people who prepared
to start filing civil suits against people who were assigned /24's (and paid for them) due to inaccurate declaration?
out of curiousity.. 'take back' means what in this context?
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