On Apr 18, 2011, at 4:33 PM, David Conrad wrote:
On Apr 18, 2011, at 4:10 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
Yes... See ARIN NRPM 8.3 and Simplified Transfer Listing Service (STLS).
ARIN allows the listing of non-ARIN blocks on their listing service?
No. If you're talking about inter-RIR transfers, then, that would be subject to draft policy 2011-1 which was reviewed at the recent Public Policy meeting in San Juan, PR and will be discussed by the AC again in May.
Also, doesn't the Microsoft-Nortel transaction violate NPRM 8.3 in that according to the court documents I've seen, Microsoft appears to have signed an LRSA (not an RSA as would seem to be required by the NPRM and as mentioned on ARIN's press release) and there doesn't appear to be anything suggesting Nortel entered into any agreement with ARIN (RSA or LRSA, however I will admit I haven't looked too closely)?
At the request of counsel, I am not going to comment on this. I do not have enough data available to me at this time to make any such judgment one way or the other.
If you want to see changes to these, suggest submitting policy via ARIN PPML or suggestions via the ARIN Consultation and Suggestion Process (ACSP).
As far as I can tell, the participants in ARIN's processes are more interested in trying to be a regulator than in being a registry. Given ARIN is not a government body and it does not have full buy-in from those who they would try to regulate, I suspect this will directly result in a proliferation of folks like tradeipv4.com, depository.net, etc. Unfortunately, I figure this will have negative repercussions for network operations (unless someone steps in and provides a definitive "address titles registry").
We have, on multiple occasions agreed to disagree about this, so, it should not come as a surprise that I continue to disagree with you. Owen