nanog mailing list archives

Re: DoD IP Space


From: John Curran <jcurran () arin net>
Date: Sun, 25 Apr 2021 20:36:12 +0000

Randy -

We don’t generally speak about specific customers – but I do acknowledge this is a bit of an unusual case...

There was no exchange at all, but rather the US DoD wanted to make sure that (if at some
point in the future) they had excess IPv4 resources that the DoD retained the ability to reutilize such elsewhere 
within the US Government rather than returning them to ARIN.

(You have to remember this was a point in time when many organizations were retuned unused IPv4 blocks in order to help 
with IPv4 longevity...) 

ARIN provided them clarity in that regard (as requiring return when other departments had need for IPv4 number 
resources was never the intent), and that has since been completely preempted by the adoption of transfer policies by 
the ARIN community.

Thanks,
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers

On Apr 25, 2021, at 12:32 PM, Randy Bush <randy () psg com> wrote:

john,

my altzheimer's device tells me that some years back there was a
documented written agreement between arin and the dod along the lines of
dod getting a large swath of ipv6 space[0] in exchange for agreeing to
return[1] or otherwise put into public use a half dozen ipv4 /8s.

could you refresh my memory, e.g. with the document, please?  thanks.

randy

--

[0] which they are still trying to figure out how to use; bit isn't half
   the internet in a similar pinch. :)

[1] since the dod probably did not get the space from arin, 'return' is
   probably not a good term.


---
randy () psg com
`gpg --locate-external-keys --auto-key-locate wkd randy () psg com`
signatures are back, thanks to dmarc header butchery


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