RFC 2050 infers something different: 2 Allocation Framework 2.1 Guidelines for Internet Service Providers (ISPs) This document makes a distinction between the allocation of IP addresses and the assignment of IP addresses. Addresses are allocated to ISPs by regional registries to assign to its customer base. ISPs who exchange routing information with other ISPs at multiple locations and operate without default routing may request space directly from the regional registry in its geographical area. ISPs with no designated regional registry may contact any regional registry and the regional registry may either handle the request or refer the request to an appropriate registry. On Thu, 31 Oct 2002, Charles H. Gucker wrote:
On Thu, Oct 31, 2002 at 06:56:22PM -0500, Alex Rubenstein wrote:
If they were singly homed to Aleron, technically, they don't qualify.
Alex, Even if they weren't multihomed, they have every right to go to ARIN to request address space (provided they could justify >= a /20 allocation). Being multihomed only helps build the case, but is not a requirement.
It's all on their website:
http://www.arin.net/policy/ipv4.html#requirements
charles
On Thu, 31 Oct 2002, E.B. Dreger wrote:
TT> Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2002 16:10:01 -0600 TT> From: Tech Team1
TT> Since we had about 16 /24s (well utilized) this was going to
And you didn't approach ARIN for PI space?
Eddy -- Brotsman & Dreger, Inc. - EverQuick Internet Division Bandwidth, consulting, e-commerce, hosting, and network building Phone: +1 (785) 865-5885 Lawrence and [inter]national Phone: +1 (316) 794-8922 Wichita
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Date: Mon, 21 May 2001 11:23:58 +0000 (GMT) From: A Trap <blacklist@brics.com> To: blacklist@brics.com Subject: Please ignore this portion of my mail signature.
These last few lines are a trap for address-harvesting spambots. Do NOT send mail to <blacklist@brics.com>, or you are likely to be blocked.
-- Alex Rubenstein, AR97, K2AHR, alex@nac.net, latency, Al Reuben -- -- Net Access Corporation, 800-NET-ME-36, http://www.nac.net --
-- Alex Rubenstein, AR97, K2AHR, alex@nac.net, latency, Al Reuben -- -- Net Access Corporation, 800-NET-ME-36, http://www.nac.net --