Allocation of IP Addresses

[excessive cc trimmed]

And it gets worse -- just WHAT is the meaning of "owning" an IP
address. Hell, I could claim to own all the class A addresses (in
fact, I actually do -- I've just never asserted my claim [ yet --
you'll be hearing from my lawyer]). An IP address is just an entry in
a database, without the cooperation of all the backbone providers. So
AT&T buys all the addresses; everyone laughs at them, and starts up
another Internet in parallel with AT&T's, and puts a network address
translator between the new Internet, and AT&T's old Internet.

See?

No, I don't 'see'. Most of the discussion that has been held on
Paul Resnick's 'Suggestions for Market-Based Allocation of IP
Address Blocks' seems to imply that once IP addresses are economic
commodities, then they will indeed be 'owned' in the traditional
sense, much the way one buys or sells a used car.

I'm of the opinion that this approach is seriously flawed, in that
it almost encourages those entities with deep pockets to hoard
address space. Any amount of fairness is removed from the equation
altogether.

I'm sorry -- I can't agree with this model, but hey, that's just me.
Perhaps others vehemently agree, perhaps not.

In any event, I believe that some economic incentive is indeed
appropriate; perhaps the route [prefix] charging model will be
the prevailing method, but that is for the providers to determine,
not for the IETF.

- paul

Paul Ferguson writes:

> I'm of the opinion that this approach is seriously flawed, in that
> it almost encourages those entities with deep pockets to hoard
> address space.

How? I've explained why it can't happen -- now you explain how it
could happen (and I'll explain how you're wrong, and you'll explain
how I'm wrong, and Paul Vixie will flame us both).

> Any amount of fairness is removed from the equation altogether.

Oh? And @Home getting a humongo allocation is fair? Essentially
what you're saying is that you think addresses should be allocated by
political power. And who gets them then? The politically powerful.
That's fair?

-russ <nelson@crynwr.com> http://www.crynwr.com/~nelson
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