Thanks Rod, The traders at Enron are/where PhDs with MBAs from Wharton, Harvard and Oxford, UK so well educated and smart was not the point of the comment. ARIN (and other RIRs) and the rules of use of IP address were specifically setup to allow global communications around the world with a large number of entities on an equal basis. IPv4 would be a fixed size pool of a commodity and from my training at Enron in trading (they were the largest in the world by number and volume of trades) it only works under several rules. You have a group of suppliers and consumers, you have a measurable commodity and a standard way of measuring it, you have a standard set of commodities, you can assign a value to the commodity etc. If I grow corn or drill for "Texas Light Crude" there standards in place so that if you drill in the Middle east, China or Russia you produce the same "Texas Light Crude" to trade. Trading of IP address does violate ARIN rules as ARIN has explained to me since to "Trade" something is to have title or ownership of that item and that ownership belongs to the cognizant RIR not to a company or person. Regards John PS: The RIRs are community driven and so if the community wants to become a market place, they can petition ARIN have a vote and change if the majority of the community wants to. ________________________________ From: Rod Beck [mailto:Rod.Beck@hiberniaatlantic.com] Sent: Mon 2/18/2008 12:05 PM To: John Lee; Raymond Macharia; NANOG list Subject: RE: IPV4 as a Commodity for Profit Hi John, I think that comment is way out of line. In fact, I met at LINX one of authors of a trading proposal. They are smart, well educated individuals. Markets have proven to be excellent mechanisms for allocating resources fairness is a distinct issue) and might be the medication required given the apparent hoarding of IP addresses. Nor is the trading of IP addresses inconsistent with ARIN ownership. Regards, Roderick S. Beck Director of European Sales Hibernia Atlantic 1, Passage du Chantier, 75012 Paris http://www.hiberniaatlantic.com <http://www.hiberniaatlantic.com/> Wireless: 1-212-444-8829. Landline: 33-1-4346-3209. French Wireless: 33-6-14-33-48-97. AOL Messenger: GlobalBandwidth rod.beck@hiberniaatlantic.com rodbeck@erols.com ``Unthinking respect for authority is the greatest enemy of truth.'' Albert Einstein. -----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu on behalf of John Lee Sent: Mon 2/18/2008 4:45 PM To: Raymond Macharia; NANOG list Subject: RE: IPV4 as a Commodity for Profit Distribution: This "idea" comes from clueless individuals who want to know "who owns the Internet"? When I worked at Enron Broadband Services "the crooked E", management wanted to buy PSInet so that "we" could developed a trading desk for IP address blocks. We informed management that neither EBS or PSInet owned their IP addresses but rented them from ARIN. And when the organization indicates that IP addresses are no longer needed, they can be returned to ARIN or ARIN can come and get them from the organization per ARIN AUP and other policies that users signed when making a request to ARIN. (Review a court case several years ago, about a company going into bankruptcy, I believe, claiming that "their" IP addresses were part of the assets of the company...) Now for those who could not follow the last paragraph, the analogy is when you were young and renting your apartment or house and you wanted to make money selling one of the rooms of your rented apartment or house. So anyone with spare /16 or larger send the blocks back to ARIN so they can be good stewards of the diminishing resource. John (ISDN) Lee I Still Don't kNow It Suites Dennis's Needs ________________________________ From: owner-nanog@merit.edu on behalf of Raymond Macharia Sent: Mon 2/18/2008 8:39 AM To: 'NANOG list' Subject: IPV4 as a Commodity for Profit Hello the article here http://www.networkworld.com/news/2008/021308-ipv6-delay.html is an interesting read given the current state of IPv4 depletion/IPv6 conversion operational climate. As it is indicated, it's a proposal and there are considerations as to whether it makes things better or worse. Regards Raymond Macharia