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What is a Regional Internet Registry?A Regional Internet Registry (RIR) is a governing body that is responsible for the administration of Internet addresses in a specific geographic region. Typically, an RIR has a mandate to control the allocation and distribution of IP addresses and domain registrations. The control and delegation of Internet addresses rose in prominence with the growth of Internet Protocol (IP) networks and the popularity of IP addressing and routing that is the cornerstone of the Internet. The architecture of the modern Internet requires each Internet aware device to have a unique IP address. The lack of an unlimited supply of IP addresses emphasizes the need for proper management of the current inventory of addresses to ensure a fair global distribution of Internet resources. RIRs must maintain a neutral policy of address allocation and distribution to prevent address hoarding and other potentially limiting practices. Globally, there are 5 RIRs that administer Internet addressing. All five RIRs combined to form the Number Resource Organization (NRO). The NRO was created as a way to coordinate technical and policy initiatives between the RIRs and to coordinate global activities. In January 2007, the NRO published a comparative policy overview of the RIRs intended as a public reference document intended for the Internet community. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) allocates addresses to each RIR. The RIR is responsible for the next level of allocation to large regional entities including Internet Service Providers (ISPs), educational institutions, government bodies, and large private enterprises. American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
Réseaux IP Européens Network Coordination Centre (RIPE NCC)
Asia-Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC)
Latin American and Caribbean Internet Address Registry (LACNIC)
African Network Information Centre (AfriNIC)
The RIRs do not charge for resources since IP's are assigned, not sold. Instead, the RIRs accept member that pay an annual fee proportional to the workload involved in servicing their requests and as an example in the case of ARIN, the annual membership fee is currently $500US and the service charges for allocating IP addresses currently range from $1,250-$18,000US with the amount being dependant on the amount of addresses being assigned and the workload involved. Generally large organisations such as Universities, banks and ISP's are members of their local RIR, as are anyone else requiring blocks of IP's such as hosting providers and data centre operators, to name a few. To obtain an allocation, members will generally fill in a form detailing their requirements, what routing and switching hardware they have to service the allocation and what justification they have for their request i.e. an ISP will have a clear justification to request a block of 4,000 IP Addresses but an individual will have difficulty justifying a need for this space.
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