Steven L Ryerse wrote:
>I think that the new RIPE policy is acknowledging this reality and I think 
>ARIN adopting
>the same identical policy makes sense because it would allow the coming 
>together of
>Legacy holders and ARIN allocations holders which I think is in everyone's 
>interest.
>
>Note that I would expect ARIN to be able to request and receive proof of a
>completed transaction before they update their database with the new 
>information.  

Interesting. So you believe it's in the interest of those of us who have signed 
RSAs and LRSAs to subsidize (through our annual fees) those who want free 
registry services even though they refuse to adhere to the number resource 
policy in our region. That policy, in part, requires that the recipient of a 
legacy resource transfer, who  by definition cannot be a legacy allocation 
recipient, sign an RSA and contribute toward the cost of providing those 
registry services.

That's an interesting perspective, but I'm not sure I agree. ARIN can't really 
control use and advertisement of resources, but if someone who isn't a pre-ARIN 
legacy recipient expects to receive registry services, I'm okay with requiring 
them to sign an RSA and pay for those services.

Scott

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