I am an ARIN admin and tech POC for one of the affected ASNs/sets of prefixes across 2 OrgIDs. I looked back at the messages I've received that mention NONAUTH or Non-Authenticated. The only thing I've gotten is the message originally sent via ARIN-Announce that John forwarded, plus similar reminders.
I'm extremely grateful to Job and Kenneth for stepping in to address
ARIN's failure here before it ruined a lot of people's weeks.
ARIN clearly stated they were attempting to reach people with records for the last year. If the contact info you had was correct and they still didn't get to you, perhaps it better to speak with them to figure out why before just branding it a 'failure'. On Mon, Apr 4, 2022 at 5:59 PM Wes George <wesgeorge@puck.nether.net> wrote:
On 4/4/2022 11:56 AM, Job Snijders via NANOG wrote:
One might argue "well, folks had more than a year to move their objects!", but on the other hand, it is entirely possible not all the right people were reached, or in cases where affected parties did receive a communication from ARIN, they perhaps were unable to understand the message.
Delurking to underscore this.
On 2/16/2022 4:33 PM, John Curran via NANOG wrote:
We also notified by email Points of Contact (POCs) of organizations who have objects in the ARIN-NONAUTH database of the retirement date and offered them our assistance with the transition.
I am an ARIN admin and tech POC for one of the affected ASNs/sets of prefixes across 2 OrgIDs. I looked back at the messages I've received that mention NONAUTH or Non-Authenticated. The only thing I've gotten is the message originally sent via ARIN-Announce that John forwarded, plus similar reminders.
I do not see any OrgID-specific communication about this.
No message saying "you are receiving this notification because you have the following items that are in this thing we're retiring and nowhere else" or "this may cause problems with your routes being propagated on the internet" or some similar warning, or even something in the generic note about how one should check to confirm whether they are affected. I didn't realize until looking at the list Job provided that this was something that affected me specifically, so the "don't care bits" were set on the generic form letters I got from ARIN.
Nowhere does it say clearly what action should be taken in response other than to contact ARIN with questions. It's getting me to generate ROAs for my prefixes, so good job there, but ARIN failed in its efforts to communicate what was happening in terms of the actual effects in order to make an appropriate call to action for those who were either like me, thinking we weren't affected, or are unfamiliar with how this interacts with the rest of the Internet's routing infrastructure.
I'm extremely grateful to Job and Kenneth for stepping in to address ARIN's failure here before it ruined a lot of people's weeks.
Wes George