End Users End users receive IP addresses for use in their internal networks only, and not for distribution to external users of their Internet services. End Users with Registration Services Plan End users may opt to pay for ARIN registration services on the same schedule as ISPs detailed above by subscribing to a Registration Services Plan. End users who do so receive additional services, including ARIN Membership and the ability to report reassignment information and/or provide utilization data via the Shared Whois Project (SWIP). Organizations that choose to convert to the Registration Services Plan will be evaluated as an ISP from a policy perspective when requesting future Internet number resources from ARIN. The applicable annual Registration Services Plan will be invoiced annually based on the organization resources in the ARIN registry. End Users Paying Per Resource End-user customers who do not have a Registration Services Plan pay fees per number resource, as specified below: IPv4 / IPv6 Number Resources Initial An organization will be assessed an initial fee for each new IPv4, IPv6, or experimental address assignment based on the service category approved for them by Registration Services. After an assignment has been approved, ARIN will invoice for payment. Payment and the executed Registration Services Agreement (RSA) must be received before resources are issued. Annual An organization’s annual fee is due each year at the end of their anniversary month (the month of their initial assignment). Annual maintenance fees are $150 USD for each IPv4 address block, $150 USD for each IPv6 address block, and $150 USD for each ASN assigned to the organization. Note: ARIN Membership is also available to end-user customers who pay fees on a per resource basis. https://www.arin.net/resources/fees/fee_schedule/#ipv4-ipv6-number-resources
On 2 Dec 2019, at 12:23, Matthew Kaufman <matthew@matthew.at> wrote:
I get $500, not $150, when I read the price list.
On Sun, Dec 1, 2019 at 4:06 PM Owen DeLong <owen@delong.com> wrote: You’re saying that there are two networks that are of sufficient complexity/size/whatever to require PA addressing, yet lack the resources for $150/year in registration fees?
I suppose it’s not impossible, but I’m wondering how they afford the other expenses associated with maintaining such a network.
Owen
On Nov 30, 2019, at 09:00 , Matthew Kaufman <matthew@matthew.at> wrote:
I administer two networks that use legacy IPv4 blocks (one also uses an allocation from the 44 net)
Both could have IPv6 if it was free, but neither organization has the funds to waste on a paid IPv6 allocation.
We should have given every legacy block matching free IPv6 space, because early adopters are still sometimes early adopters.
But you’re right, what could have been supported on a volunteer basis is now a profit center. Especially for IPv6, which is once-and-done if sized properly.
Matthew Kaufman
On Tue, Nov 26, 2019 at 2:29 PM <bzs@theworld.com> wrote:
If the commitment really was to spread IPv6 far and wide IPv6 blocks would be handed out for free, one per qualified customer (e.g., if you have an IPv4 allocation you get one IPv6 block free), or perhaps some trivial administrative fee like $10 per year.
But the RIRs can't live on that.
We have put them under the management of a group of five organizations which are very dependent on the income from block allocations and no doubt were hoping IPv6 allocations would be a boon since there will be very little if any income growth from future IPv4 block allocations.
Worse, once acquired an IPv6 block has so many billions of addresses very few if any would ever need another allocation so it would hardly act as a loss leader.
I realize many still would not deploy IPv6 for various reasons such as their equipment doesn't support it or they don't have the in-house expertise to support it, etc tho I can't think of much other etc, a few points of resistance do come up.
-- -Barry Shein
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