OK. So WHY AREN"T people using the routing registry? If they did would they be able to get around individual peering and transit agreements? Is it a chicken and egg thing. IE what percentage of global routes does the registry have? how does the registry as it stands now save people time, trouble or money?
for answers to some of these questions, I would point you at the following URL: http://www.merit.edu/routing.arbiter/RA/index.html The IRR has little to do with peering & transit, other than to reflect agreements. Other questions will have to be answered by people in the community. Many people do register in the IRR. Those that don't, won't for a variety of reasons. For some, there is an unwillingness to trust a thirdparty operator coupled with no desire to run a portion of the registry in-house. When these two conditions are found in a large-scale provider, the concept and implementation of the Internet RR are frustrated to the extent that the non-participating provider becomes increasingly unreachable/understandable. They are relegated to peridoc public postings to mailing lists for definitions of their routing policies. I expect that the example set by other large-scale providers would be an incentive. Running a section of the IRR inhouse shows a spirit of cooperation and a desire to share in the global internet. Refusal to do so appears, at least to me, to be an arrogant, egotistical view about any specific providers importance to a working global internet. --bill