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Category Archive for "ARIN"

37

2008 ARIN Election Results

Oct 31, 2008

Well, the results are now official; I did not get a seat on the ARIN AC this year. I will of course continue my activity on the ARIN PPML and hopefully make it to (at least one or two of) next years meetings. Who knows, maybe I will run again in 2009! Congratulations to everyone […]

38

My 2008 ARIN AC Candidate Speech

Oct 28, 2008

The ARIN XXII meeting report was made available today. It contains, among many other things, a transcript of all the BoT and AC candidate speeches that were made on Friday morning. I have copied mine here: MR. GRUNDEMANN: Good morning. Yes, I’m Christopher Grundemann. I was sitting there thinking about what I could say up […]

39

The Library Book Approach to IPv4 Scarcity

Oct 22, 2008

IP space (v4, v6, vX) is a public resource and as such should be borrowed, used and returned by those with a need for it.

40

ARIN Election Open Now

Oct 17, 2008

The 2008 ARIN Election is now open. Make sure your voice is heard.

41

Official 2008 Advisory Council Candidate

Sep 11, 2008

I am a candidate in the 2008 ARIN Advisory Council election.

42

Liberalized IPv4 Transfer Policy Decision Tree

Sep 9, 2008

A decision tree to help in evaluating a liberalized IP address transfer policy.

43

Annual WHOIS POC Validation

Aug 22, 2008

I submitted my first policy proposal to ARIN.

44

Nominated for ARIN AC

Aug 20, 2008

I was nominated for a seat on the ARIN Advisory Council (AC) this week. I am very excited about this and am hopeful that I will be elected. ARIN [wikipedia] has a very organized election process, part of which is a questionnaire that all candidates must answer to serve as their campaign statement and bio. […]

45

Why LIR/EU transfer policies are a bad idea, and what to do instead.

Apr 10, 2008

LIR/EU Transfer policies are a bad idea, and there are other options. To understand this we must first agree on what a “LIR/EU transfer policy” is. Then we can look into the problems with this type of transfer policy (and there are many). Such a policy slows IPv6 adoption, which is a very bad thing […]

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Chris Grundemann

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