North American Network Operators Group
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Re: size of the routing table is a big deal, especially in IPv6
- From: Hank Nussbacher
- Date: Tue Nov 30 03:10:58 2004
At 08:14 PM 29-11-04 -0800, Tony Li wrote:
In the decentralized world of the Internet, we have a bigger problem in
that we do not have a clear entity that impose the necessary regulatory
pressures and there is no commercial pressure. All we can do is to ask
people to be good Internet citizens and to act locally for the global
good. The challenge, of course, is that this is in almost no one's
immediate best interest.
My preferred solution at this point is for the UN to take over management
of the entire Internet and for them to issue a policy of one prefix per
country. This will have all sorts of nasty downsides for national
providers and folks that care about optimal routing, but it's the only way
that I can see that will allow the Internet to continue to operate over
the long term.
Before going to the UN (and I assume you mean the ITU), I would prefer to
see ICANN+IANA+RIRs do the necessary work involved. That means that in
addition to allocating IP blocks to ISPs and end customers, to also police
said resources. It is always mentioned that IP blocks are not "bought" or
"owned" but "leased" out by the RIRs. If an ISP is polluting the commons,
then the RIR that allocated the IP resource should first contact the
customer. If the customer doesn't mend their ways, then the RIR should be
free to start announcing that IP block and static route it to some RIR
blackhole. That would definitely get the attention of the wayward
ISP/customer. Of course all this would have to be backed up by IAB+IETF as
well, but I think we should learn to police ourselves before we ask for the
UN/ITU to do it for us.
-Hank
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