On Tue, 29 Jun 2004, william(at)elan.net wrote:
Not an ARIN example but when KPNQwest went out of business, the situation was as you desribe and it would have been difficult to everybody to quickly renumber so their PA assigned customer ip blocks with assistance of RIPE became PI blocks (at least this is how I understood it, people in europe can correct me if this is not right). So the precidents do exist, but they involve having RIR take over the block.
Europeans have been nitpicking above info to me privately. I'll summarize what was said to me: KPNQwest blocks were dealt with differently depending what country this was for. In some cases, the blocks were converted to PI by RIPE. In some cases other companies bought KPNQwest operations for particular country and became responsible LIR. Those LIRs did not mind about other ISPs announcing parts of those ip blocks separately although RIPE is as of late been trying to get them to clean up that space and things may change. Additionally there were some early blocks from KPN to begin with where it is not entirely clear if they were supposed to have been PI or PA and those were resolved to PI. Also notable is that former KPN techs and ip admins after the company was gone, on their own time and without getting any compensation worked with RIPE to try to resolve the issues as much as possible and to help their former customers. Additionally with permission I'm reposting the email on how the issue of customer with PA space changing ISPs is dealt with: ----- Date: Wed, 30 Jun 2004 13:05:57 +0200 From: Kurt Jaeger <pi@complx.LF.net> To: william@elan.net Subject: Re: Non-Portable ip blocks become portable Hi! As I'm only reading nanon on the web, one small data point: In ripe-land, it is common to route PA-adress space for approx. 6 month after some customer switched ISPs. So the customer has approx. 6 month to renumber, and that should be plenty for everyone... After those 6 month, all bets are off 8-} -- MfG/Best regards, Kurt Jaeger 16 years to go !