On Nov 1, 2010, at 4:19 PM, Karl Auer wrote:
On Mon, 2010-11-01 at 15:26 -0700, Jeroen van Aart wrote:
Karl Auer wrote:
That was with the waivers in force. It will soon cost a one-time US $1250. We could argue till the cows come home about what proportion of the population would consider that "prohibitive" but I'm guessing that even in the USA that's a heck of an entry fee, and that the vast majority of non-corporate end users will not be willing to pay it. Which is the actual point, rather than quibbling about the precise price.
That seems to be quite an argument against trying to get IPv6 GUA, or am I missing something?
Interesting... I guess controlling your own internet fate hasn't been a priority for the companies where you've worked. Not one of my clients or the companies I have worked for has even given a second thought to approving the cost of address space once I presented the tradeoffs of PA vs. PI. Depending on your meaning of non-corporate (e.g. non-business or just not large business since this is unclear from your meaning and corporations come in all sizes including a single person), this may or may not be true.
No you're not missing anything. And this is a good, simple policy tool to keep the numbers of PI routes down. At least from the US. But similar fees seem to be in force at other RIRs like APNIC and RIPE.
The fees are not there to keep routes down. The fees are there to help the RIR recover the cost of maintaining the RIR and processing the application. Frankly, if we simplified the approval process we could probably lower the cost of reviewing these applications and thus lower the fees. Owen