1997/01/21 運営委員会 資料 3-8 国際連携検討部会報告 1. APNICの香港会合 (General Meeting) General Meetingが1月31日に香港で開催される。 会合の案内は http://www.apnic.net/agm.html に掲載されている。 予定されている議題は以下の通り。 8:00 - 9:00 Registration and Continental Breakfast 9:00 - 9:30 Call to order and Administrivia 9:30 - 10:30 Executive Council Elections (2 seats) 10:30 - 11:00 APNIC Secretariat Status Report 11:00 - 12:00 Funding Plan Modifications discussions and voting 12:00 - 1:30 Lunch (not provided) 1:30 - 2:30 APNIC Activities Plan discussions and voting 2:30 - 4:45 Member Updates 4:45 - 5:00 Adjournment (1) Executive councilの5名のメンバーのうち2名が改選となる。 現メンバーを下記に示す。 David Conrad - Director General Geoff Huston (Australia) - 18 Month Term Jun Murai (Japan) - 18 Month Term Tan Tze Meng (Malaysia) - 18 Month Term Sanjaya (Indonesia) - 6 Month Term B.A.C. Abeyantha (Sri lanka) (Absent) - 6 Month Term (2) Funding Planの議論はJPNICにとって関係が深い。 a) Setting non-membership fees based on address space utilization b) Creation of a "confederation" fee category which has fees based on the number of members. この(b)については、次のような会費の原案がある。 USD5,000 + USD500×会員数。つまり200会員を擁するconfederationの APNIC会費は 5,000 + 100,000 = USD105,000 となる。 (3) Member update の内容は、これまでの会合における発表を参考にすると、 次のような項目について、OHP/displayで説明するのが良いと思われる。 1. JPNIC の概要 (会員数、予算の額(*)、事務局のスタッフの数(*)) 2. IP address の割当の状況 (1996 or 推移) 3. domain 名の割当の状況 (1996 or 推移) 4. AS number の割当 (*) 5. IP address に関して: portable address の扱い 6. domain 名に関して: ne の導入、一意性の制約を緩和、brand domain の議論、 地域ドメイン(*) (*) の項目は、これまでの APNIC における JPNIC の発表に対して、他の 国から質問が出たことがあるもの。 2. APNIC Executive Council General Meetingの前日(1月30日)にExecutive Councilが開かれる。 予定されている議題は次のようである。 a) APNIC headquarters location b) APNIC budget situation c) APNIC "surplus" d) APNIC Ltd. Stock (a)に関する現在(本資料執筆時点)の状況では、オーストラリアにheadquartersを置き、 日本はbranch officeとするという提案が予想される。 上記の他に、APNICからISPにアドレスを最初に割当てる際のdefaultを /22 から /19に増加させる(RIPE-NCCに揃える)、という提案が審議される見通しである。 ======== [Confederation に関するドキュメント] ftp:://ftp.apnic.net/apnic/docs/apnic-051.txt Introduction This document describes the concepts of and the requirements necessary to become an APNIC recognized Internet Service Provider Confederation. ISP Confederations are intended to provide a means by which a group of service providers can group together to provide resource allocation and registration services tailored to their specific local language and cultural requirements as well as a way of reducing the burden of the APNIC membership fees to individual member organizations. Internet Service Provider Confederations APNIC, having limited resources, is unable to provide allocation and registration services tailored to specific cultural or language requirements. In realization of these limitations, APNIC has created the concept of Internet Service Provider (ISP) Confederations. ISP Confederations are defined to be a group of three or more Internet connectivity service providing organizations (commercial or non-commercial) which have formed a separate independent organization to provide the resource allocation and registration services. This independent organization, refered to in this document as the "confederation registry", is assumed to be neutral and unbiased to all confederation members. A confederation's membership can be defined in many ways. In some cases, a confederation may be formed by a national government or other national body and be intended to provide allocation and registry services to service providers within the national boundaries. In other cases, competitive Internet service providers in multiple regions may join together to form a confederation with the only constraint on membership being a willingness to abide by the confederation's oprational and organizational rules. In all cases, however, it is expected that the definitions for membership within a confederation are well defined and published. In addition, there is no requirement for organizations which may be included within the definition of a particular confederation's membership requirements must make use of that confederation's services -- any ISP is free to obtain resources directly from APNIC should they so choose. Establishment Requirements To become an APNIC recognized Internet Service Provider confederation and have resources delegated from APNIC, a confederation registry must be estabished under the following requirements: 1) The confederation registry must be an independent, non-profit entity (not necessarily incorporated, however this is recommended) administratively distinct from any one particular confederation member. This allows the confederation registry to act in a neutral and unbiased fashion towards all members. 2) The confederation registry must be composed of three or more non-affiliated Internet connectivity service providing organizations which provide Internet connectivity services which require delegation of blocks of addresses. This requirement ensures the overhead associated with a confederation is distributed over a sufficient number of organizations as well as reducing the likelihood of confederations being established to circumvent existing registry policies. 3) The confederation registry must pay a yearly fee to APNIC consisting of US $5000 plus US $500 per member (e.g., if a confederation has 5 members its yearly fee will be US $5000 + 5 * US $500 == US $7500). This requirement will ensure APNIC has sufficient resources to continue processing confederation requests. 4) The allocation body of the confederation registry must demonstrate an understanding and willingness to abide by the guidelines documented in RFCs 2050 and 1930. This requirement ensures allocations made by the confederation are appropriate and consistent with existing registry guidelines. 5) The confederation registry must provide documents describing (in English): a) Confederation organizational structure and procedures including administrative structure and chain of appeal thereby giving APNIC the information necessary to adjudicate disputes brought before it; b) Membership eligibility requirements and termination procedures thereby allowing APNIC for redirect requests to confederations where appropriate c) Member organizations including i) Member organization's name ii) Member organization's postal address iii) Member organization's email, telephone and facsimile numbers iv) Member organization's APNIC account name (if such exists) thereby reducing the likelihood of organizations joining multiple confederations in order to circumvent allocation restrictions. d) IP address allocation guidelines beyond those documented in RFC 2050. e) AS number allocation guidelines beyond those documented in RFC 1930. The documents described in (5) will be made available to the Internet community via APNIC's FTP and Web services. Modifications to a confederation's structure, its membership, or any of its policies must be reported to APNIC within five working days. In addition to these requirements, it is assumed confederations operate their own registration database systems. If the primary language of the confederation is not English, it is suggested the confederation database be provided in the appropriate local language. In any case, however, the operation of a local database does not relieve the confederation of having to update the APNIC database as the APNIC database is considered authoritative for all address blocks delegated by APNIC. Operational Requirements Confederations will be allocated blocks of addresses and autonomous sytem numbers which are intended to be sub-allocated to confederation member organizations, with the amount of address space allocated by APNIC rounded up to the next power-of-two block. It is expected the confederation will allocate resources to their members in a fashion similar to the allocation mechanisms documented in RFC 2050 (e.g., "slow-start") and RFC 1930. When a member has consumed its allocation, the member should contact the confederation administrator to request additional address space. If the confederation administrator has insufficient resources to meet the member's request, the confederation administrator should request additional space from APNIC via the appropriate form. When APNIC receives this form, APNIC will review the allocation history for the confederation and verify reassignments have been made appropriately. Assuming all requirements have been met, APNIC will allocate additional resources sufficient to enable the confederation to operate 3 to 6 months without need of additional address space. APNIC always reserves the right to reduce or withhold resource allocations to confederations which do not conform to APNIC or accepted Internet allocation policies. Should a confederation be established which has as a member an existing APNIC member, APNIC will not allocate a new block to the confederation for that member immediately, but will instead transfer control of that block to the confederation. Conclusion Internet Service Provider Confederations are intended to provide resource allocation and registration services to subsets of the Asia Pacific Internet community which APNIC serves. These confederations allow for local language and culture issues to be address more readily than APNIC can provide for as well as allowing confederation members with a way to reduce fees paid directly to APNIC for APNIC membership. ========