Deputy Director General, Sanjaya, attended the Indonesian Network Information Centre's (IDNIC) 2017 OPM and gave an update on APNIC services and activities, including IPv6 deployment measurement information.
APNIC is one of five Regional Internet Registries charged with distributing and managing IP addresses and related resources globally. It is a not-for-profit membership organization headquartered in Brisbane, Australia with over 70 staff from across the Asia Pacific region. APNIC's vision is to support an open, stable, and secure Internet across the Asia Pacific community. It provides resources and training to members and partners to develop the Internet, including hosting numerous events in Indonesia over the past five years to promote topics like IPv6 and security. Moving forward, APNIC plans to further engage with Indonesian stakeholders on Internet policy and infrastructure projects.
1) APNIC provides internet number resources and services to members in the Asia Pacific region while also supporting regional internet development and global cooperation.
2) Membership has grown significantly over time and now includes over 16,000 members, with over half of members now having IPv6 resources.
3) APNIC engages in activities like training, technical assistance, policy development, and security initiatives to support members and internet development in South Asia and the broader region.
- APNIC provides Internet number resources and services to members across the Asia Pacific region and works to support an open, global, stable and secure Internet.
- APNIC membership and resources delegated have grown substantially over time, though the percentage of IPv4 and IPv6 address space under ROAs is still low.
- The annual APNIC survey found that security is the biggest challenge faced by members, and APNIC aims to help by providing security training and tools.
- APNIC also works on activities like routing security, improving whois data quality, developing the APNIC foundation, and supporting Internet development in various countries.
APNIC is one of five Regional Internet Registries charged with distributing and managing IP addresses and related resources globally. It is a not-for-profit membership organization headquartered in Brisbane, Australia with over 70 staff from across the Asia Pacific region. APNIC's vision is to support an open, stable, and secure Internet across the Asia Pacific community. It provides resources and training to members and partners to develop the Internet, including hosting numerous events in Indonesia over the past five years to promote topics like IPv6 and security. Moving forward, APNIC plans to further engage with Indonesian stakeholders on Internet policy and infrastructure projects.
1) APNIC provides internet number resources and services to members in the Asia Pacific region while also supporting regional internet development and global cooperation.
2) Membership has grown significantly over time and now includes over 16,000 members, with over half of members now having IPv6 resources.
3) APNIC engages in activities like training, technical assistance, policy development, and security initiatives to support members and internet development in South Asia and the broader region.
- APNIC provides Internet number resources and services to members across the Asia Pacific region and works to support an open, global, stable and secure Internet.
- APNIC membership and resources delegated have grown substantially over time, though the percentage of IPv4 and IPv6 address space under ROAs is still low.
- The annual APNIC survey found that security is the biggest challenge faced by members, and APNIC aims to help by providing security training and tools.
- APNIC also works on activities like routing security, improving whois data quality, developing the APNIC foundation, and supporting Internet development in various countries.
Presented by Klée Aiken at the 54th Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Telecommunications and Information Working Group held in Kyoto, Japan from 31 October to 4 November.
Community Engagement Specialist, Sunny Chendi, provides an update of APNIC's service initiatives and activities at the second Nepal Network Operators Group meeting in Kathmandu.
Presentation given by Paul Wilson, Director General APNIC, at the 25th Latin America and Caribbean Network Information Centre Meeting, in Havana, Cuba, 2 to 6 May 2016
Tuan Nguyen presented an update on the IPv4 address pool, IPv4 transfers and new features in MyAPNIC at btNOG 3 in Thimpu, Bhutan from 14 to 18 November 2016.
IANA Activities Update by Elise Gerich [APRICOT 2015]APNIC
The document provides an update on IANA activities, including:
- IPv4 allocations occurring twice yearly according to a published schedule and formula. The most recent allocation was on March 2, 2015.
- Performance reports showing IANA routinely meets or exceeds targets for allocation of internet numbering resources and protocol parameters.
- Recent audits ensuring appropriate controls are in place for availability, processing integrity, security, and authorization.
- An update on the Registration Data Access Protocol, with the IESG approving a draft and IANA reviewing registry creation approaches.
Keynote presentation on the Internet of Things given by Paul Wilson, Director General at APNIC, at the inaugural Taiwan Internet Forum, held in Taipei, Taiwan from 8 December 2015
This document provides a summary of APNIC services and activities in 2014. It discusses membership growth statistics, IPv4 and IPv6 allocation trends, autonomous system number assignments, improvements to APNIC services like MyAPNIC and security updates. It also summarizes community development projects, ISIF Asia grants and awards that support technical innovation, and upcoming events like APRICOT 2015.
This document provides an overview of APNIC's policy development process. It begins with background on APNIC and its mission to serve as the regional internet registry for the Asia Pacific region. It then discusses the global internet policy ecosystem and APNIC's role in developing policies. The APNIC policy development process is outlined, including how anyone can propose a policy and how consensus is reached. Current policy proposals are mentioned, including allowing larger IPv6 allocations based on utilization. Regional meetings are also discussed where training is provided but they are not involved in policymaking.
This document provides updates from APNIC on membership statistics, IPv4 and IPv6 address delegations for Bhutan and other regions, autonomous system number assignments, improvements to the APNIC Whois service and MyAPNIC portal, training activities, community engagement initiatives, survey results on the quality of APNIC services, efforts to improve communication, and the state of IPv6 adoption in Bhutan. It highlights projects to expand internet infrastructure and connectivity in developing parts of Asia and the growing importance of wireless and mobile broadband access using 4G/LTE technology.
This document discusses the linkages between governmental policy and IPv6 adoption. It begins with background on IPv4 address exhaustion and the need to adopt IPv6. It then examines IPv6 readiness around the world and provides examples from various countries and economies. Recommendations are made to SATRC to encourage a multi-stakeholder approach, establish IPv6 guidelines, conduct industry readiness research, and develop policies and human capacity. APNIC can contribute training, monitoring, and outreach efforts to support the transition.
CNNIC Update, by Jessica Shen [APNIC 38 / NIR SIG]APNIC
CNNIC provides an update on its member growth, IPv4 and IPv6 allocation, China's internet statistics, .CN domain names, and SSL certificates. The number of CNNIC members has reached 645, with 1/3 of new members in cloud computing. CNNIC has allocated over 297,000 /24 IPv4 addresses and portions of 3 /21 IPv6 blocks. China has over 632 million internet users and its .CN domain registration is nearly 100% real-name based. CNNIC provides trusted SSL certificates and looks to expand this service.
CNCERT Conference 2017: Capacity development in the Asia PacificAPNIC
APNIC Security Specialist Adli Wahid presented on APNIC's security outreach and capacity development activities at the CNCERT Conference 2017 in Qingdao, China from 22 to 24 May 2017.
1) The document discusses the history and growth of APNIC since its establishment in 1993 to take over the function of assigning internet numbers in the Asia Pacific region from IANA.
2) It provides statistics on the growth of APNIC membership and resources assigned such as IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and autonomous system numbers over the years.
3) APNIC's activities and services are summarized, including training and technical assistance provided to members and communities, infrastructure services, engagement in global internet governance issues, and collaboration with other regional internet registries.
This document provides an activity report for APNIC in 2016. It summarizes APNIC's activities in serving members, supporting regional internet development, and cooperating with the global internet community. Key activities included providing training and technical assistance to over 2,000 people, supporting internet exchange points, conducting security and IPv6 outreach, and collaborating with other RIRs on projects like the IANA transition. APNIC also held its annual conference and technical meetings with hundreds of attendees from over 50 economies represented.
Presented by Klée Aiken at the 54th Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Telecommunications and Information Working Group held in Kyoto, Japan from 31 October to 4 November.
Community Engagement Specialist, Sunny Chendi, provides an update of APNIC's service initiatives and activities at the second Nepal Network Operators Group meeting in Kathmandu.
Presentation given by Paul Wilson, Director General APNIC, at the 25th Latin America and Caribbean Network Information Centre Meeting, in Havana, Cuba, 2 to 6 May 2016
Tuan Nguyen presented an update on the IPv4 address pool, IPv4 transfers and new features in MyAPNIC at btNOG 3 in Thimpu, Bhutan from 14 to 18 November 2016.
IANA Activities Update by Elise Gerich [APRICOT 2015]APNIC
The document provides an update on IANA activities, including:
- IPv4 allocations occurring twice yearly according to a published schedule and formula. The most recent allocation was on March 2, 2015.
- Performance reports showing IANA routinely meets or exceeds targets for allocation of internet numbering resources and protocol parameters.
- Recent audits ensuring appropriate controls are in place for availability, processing integrity, security, and authorization.
- An update on the Registration Data Access Protocol, with the IESG approving a draft and IANA reviewing registry creation approaches.
Keynote presentation on the Internet of Things given by Paul Wilson, Director General at APNIC, at the inaugural Taiwan Internet Forum, held in Taipei, Taiwan from 8 December 2015
This document provides a summary of APNIC services and activities in 2014. It discusses membership growth statistics, IPv4 and IPv6 allocation trends, autonomous system number assignments, improvements to APNIC services like MyAPNIC and security updates. It also summarizes community development projects, ISIF Asia grants and awards that support technical innovation, and upcoming events like APRICOT 2015.
This document provides an overview of APNIC's policy development process. It begins with background on APNIC and its mission to serve as the regional internet registry for the Asia Pacific region. It then discusses the global internet policy ecosystem and APNIC's role in developing policies. The APNIC policy development process is outlined, including how anyone can propose a policy and how consensus is reached. Current policy proposals are mentioned, including allowing larger IPv6 allocations based on utilization. Regional meetings are also discussed where training is provided but they are not involved in policymaking.
This document provides updates from APNIC on membership statistics, IPv4 and IPv6 address delegations for Bhutan and other regions, autonomous system number assignments, improvements to the APNIC Whois service and MyAPNIC portal, training activities, community engagement initiatives, survey results on the quality of APNIC services, efforts to improve communication, and the state of IPv6 adoption in Bhutan. It highlights projects to expand internet infrastructure and connectivity in developing parts of Asia and the growing importance of wireless and mobile broadband access using 4G/LTE technology.
This document discusses the linkages between governmental policy and IPv6 adoption. It begins with background on IPv4 address exhaustion and the need to adopt IPv6. It then examines IPv6 readiness around the world and provides examples from various countries and economies. Recommendations are made to SATRC to encourage a multi-stakeholder approach, establish IPv6 guidelines, conduct industry readiness research, and develop policies and human capacity. APNIC can contribute training, monitoring, and outreach efforts to support the transition.
CNNIC Update, by Jessica Shen [APNIC 38 / NIR SIG]APNIC
CNNIC provides an update on its member growth, IPv4 and IPv6 allocation, China's internet statistics, .CN domain names, and SSL certificates. The number of CNNIC members has reached 645, with 1/3 of new members in cloud computing. CNNIC has allocated over 297,000 /24 IPv4 addresses and portions of 3 /21 IPv6 blocks. China has over 632 million internet users and its .CN domain registration is nearly 100% real-name based. CNNIC provides trusted SSL certificates and looks to expand this service.
CNCERT Conference 2017: Capacity development in the Asia PacificAPNIC
APNIC Security Specialist Adli Wahid presented on APNIC's security outreach and capacity development activities at the CNCERT Conference 2017 in Qingdao, China from 22 to 24 May 2017.
1) The document discusses the history and growth of APNIC since its establishment in 1993 to take over the function of assigning internet numbers in the Asia Pacific region from IANA.
2) It provides statistics on the growth of APNIC membership and resources assigned such as IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and autonomous system numbers over the years.
3) APNIC's activities and services are summarized, including training and technical assistance provided to members and communities, infrastructure services, engagement in global internet governance issues, and collaboration with other regional internet registries.
This document provides an activity report for APNIC in 2016. It summarizes APNIC's activities in serving members, supporting regional internet development, and cooperating with the global internet community. Key activities included providing training and technical assistance to over 2,000 people, supporting internet exchange points, conducting security and IPv6 outreach, and collaborating with other RIRs on projects like the IANA transition. APNIC also held its annual conference and technical meetings with hundreds of attendees from over 50 economies represented.
The APNIC Secretariat Report provides an overview of APNIC's activities from January to August 2018. Key points include:
- Membership has grown steadily to over 18,000 members as of August 2018. IPv4, IPv6, and ASN delegations and transfers also increased.
- MyAPNIC and the APNIC Academy online training platform were improved with new features and courses. Over 40 face-to-face training events reached over 1,300 participants.
- Engagement in security initiatives increased through workshops, training, and collaboration. New CERT teams were established in Tonga, PNG, and Vanuatu with APNIC's support.
- Conferences like APRICOT
1) APNIC is the regional internet registry for Asia Pacific and is responsible for delegating IP addresses and ASNs to the region. It provides training and supports internet development.
2) The presentation covered how to apply for and receive IP resources from APNIC, the rise of IPv6 adoption, and APNIC's services including member support, training programs, technical assistance, and research activities.
3) APNIC hosts events like NOGs and APRICOT to facilitate technical discussions and provide updates on internet infrastructure topics.
APNIC Director General Paul Wilson gives an update on APNIC's activities and new service initiatives at AIS 2018, held alongside AFRINIC 28 in Dakar, Senegal, from 29 April to 11 May 2018.
This document provides an overview and update on the activities of APNIC, the regional internet registry serving the Asia Pacific region. It summarizes APNIC's key activities including serving members, supporting regional internet development, and cooperating with the global internet community. Specific areas highlighted include membership growth, IPv4 and IPv6 statistics, training and technical assistance programs, policy activities, security initiatives, and collaboration with other RIRs and the global internet community.
The document provides an update on APNIC services. It summarizes APNIC's vision of an open, stable, and secure Internet for Asia Pacific and its mission to function as the regional internet registry and support community development. Key updates include continued growth in membership, IPv6 adoption, and internet number resources. Improvements to registration services and tools are noted. Activities to facilitate training and infrastructure development are reviewed, along with collaboration on measurement and analysis through APNIC Labs.
The document provides an update on APNIC services. It summarizes APNIC's vision of an open, stable, and secure Internet for Asia Pacific and its mission to function as the regional internet registry and support community development. Key updates include continued growth in membership, IPv6 adoption, and internet number resources as well as improvements to registration services and tools. APNIC also discusses its support for infrastructure, training initiatives, and collaboration activities to facilitate regional internet development.
APNIC Senior Advisor - Strategic Engagement Joyce Chen gives an update of IPv6 deployment in the region at APEC TEL 62, held online from 3 to 4 March 2021.
APNIC is the Regional Internet Registry for the Asia Pacific region and serves the region's members by supporting Internet development, collaborating with the Internet community, and providing training and resources. As IPv4 addresses are running out, APNIC is rationing its last remaining block and allowing limited transfers and recycling of returned addresses. It is also focusing on IPv6 training and deployment and providing infrastructure grants to support network operators and Internet development projects in the region. APNIC invites members to its upcoming conference to discuss these trends and technologies shaping the Internet.
This document provides a summary of updates from APNIC, including:
- Membership and internet number delegations have grown steadily over time.
- Several new internet resource policies were recently implemented.
- Services have been improved, including additional features for the Whois service and MyAPNIC portal.
- Support for members and the community continues through training, funding programs, and technical research.
Strategic Engagement Director Pablo Hinojosa gives an update on APNIC's activities and new service initiatives at AFRINIC 29 in Hammamet, Tunisia from 26 to 30 November 2018.
APNIC Report as presented by Guangliang Pan at ARIN's Public Policy and Members Meeting in April 2014. All ARIN 33 presentations are posted online at: https://www.arin.net/ARIN33_materials
The document provides an overview of APNIC's activities and accomplishments in 2014. Key points include:
- APNIC served over 3,500 members while supporting training, collaboration and outreach efforts across the Asia Pacific region.
- Notable achievements involved improvements to systems like MyAPNIC, distributed WHOIS, and infrastructure security.
- Activities focused on areas such as IPv6 and security advocacy, policy development, and supporting network operator groups.
- Global cooperation efforts included engagement in the IANA transition process and working with other RIRs on issues like RPKI.
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
Registry Data Accuracy Improvements, presented by Chimi Dorji at SANOG 41 / I...APNIC
Chimi Dorji, Internet Resource Analyst at APNIC, presented on Registry Data Accuracy Improvements at SANOG 41 jointly held with INNOG 7 in Mumbai, India from 25 to 30 April 2024.
APNIC Policy Roundup, presented by Sunny Chendi at the 5th ICANN APAC-TWNIC E...APNIC
Sunny Chendi, Senior Advisor, Membership and Policy at APNIC, presents 'APNIC Policy Roundup' at the 5th ICANN APAC-TWNIC Engagement Forum and 41st TWNIC OPM in Taipei, Taiwan from 23 to 24 April.
DDoS In Oceania and the Pacific, presented by Dave Phelan at NZNOG 2024APNIC
Dave Phelan, Senior Network Analyst/Technical Trainer at APNIC, presents 'DDoS In Oceania and the Pacific' at NZNOG 2024 held in Nelson, New Zealand from 8 to 12 April 2024.
'Future Evolution of the Internet' delivered by Geoff Huston at Everything Op...APNIC
Geoff Huston, Chief Scientist at APNIC deliver keynote presentation on the 'Future Evolution of the Internet' at the Everything Open 2024 conference in Gladstone, Australia from 16 to 18 April 2024.
IP addressing and IPv6, presented by Paul Wilson at IETF 119APNIC
Paul Wilson, Director General of APNIC delivers a presentation on IP addressing and IPv6 to the Policymakers Program during IETF 119 in Brisbane Australia from 16 to 22 March 2024.
draft-harrison-sidrops-manifest-number-01, presented at IETF 119APNIC
Tom Harrison, Product and Delivery Manager at APNIC presents at the Registration Protocols Extensions working group during IETF 119 in Brisbane, Australia from 16-22 March 2024
Benefits of doing Internet peering and running an Internet Exchange (IX) pres...APNIC
Che-Hoo Cheng, Senior Director, Development at APNIC presents on the "Benefits of doing Internet peering and running an Internet Exchange (IX)" at the Communications Regulatory Commission of Mongolia's IPv6, IXP, Datacenter - Policy and Regulation International Trends Forum in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia on 7 March 2024
APNIC Update and RIR Policies for ccTLDs, presented at APTLD 85APNIC
APNIC Senior Advisor, Membership and Policy, Sunny Chendi presented on APNIC updates and RIR Policies for ccTLDs at APTLD 85 in Goa, India from 19-22 February 2024.
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Meet up Milano 14 _ Axpo Italia_ Migration from Mule3 (On-prem) to.pdfFlorence Consulting
Quattordicesimo Meetup di Milano, tenutosi a Milano il 23 Maggio 2024 dalle ore 17:00 alle ore 18:30 in presenza e da remoto.
Abbiamo parlato di come Axpo Italia S.p.A. ha ridotto il technical debt migrando le proprie APIs da Mule 3.9 a Mule 4.4 passando anche da on-premises a CloudHub 1.0.
2. What is APNIC?
• The Regional Internet address
Registry (RIR) for the AP region
• Manages Internet number
resources
– Including IPv4 and IPv6 addresses
• Supports training, education and
internet development
• A neutral, independent,
not-for-profit, open membership-
based organization, since 1993
2
3.
4. APNIC’s Vision
A global, open, stable and secure
Internet that serves the entire Asia
Pacific community
4
10. IPv4 transfers
10
As at 31 December
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Between RIR Regions
Within APNIC Region
12. Why IPv6 ?
• IPv4 address supply is exhausted
– New networks require addresses
– Stop-gap measures are damaging (NAT)
• The Internet is growing fast
– Broadband: mobile and WiFi
– Internet of Things
• IPv6 is the only viable option we have now
– Much larger address space than IPv4
– Enable sustainable growth of the Internet
– Support the emergence of new technologies
33. IPv6 Outreach
APNIC/ITU IPv6
Workshop, Bangkok
34
• 18 face-to-face training sessions,
501 trainees including IPv6
workshop with ITU in TH
• 36 elearning sessions reaching 245
trainees
• Promoting IPv6 with presentations at
23 regional events
• Input to policy makers to include
IPv6 in UN ESCAP’s AP-IS plan
• Assisted Singapore IDA’s IPv6
survey and ASEAN workshop
• Supported IGF IPv6 Best Practices
Forum
ITU/APNIC IPv6 workshop
IDA IPv6 workshop
34. But I still need IPv4?
• Last /8 Policy
– /22 available to each organization
– Just once
• Recovered IPv4 pool
– /22 available to each organization
– Join the wait list!
• IPv4 Transfers
– Available for transfers between consenting parties
– Financial transaction is not APNIC’s business ($4 to $40 per address?)
– Brokers are available to “assist”
– See www.apnic.net/transfer
36. Training and Technical Assistance
37
TA- Indonesia
Network Security workshop, Hong
Kong
• 62 face-to-face courses in 25 locations
to 1,934 trainees
• Nine community trainers delivered 12
face-to-face courses in six locations
• 883 trainees in 130 eLearning sessions
• Updated IRM, IRR, Network Security,
MPLS, SDN, NFV courses with new
hands-on exercises
• Technical Assistance provided to nine
Members (ID, FJ, NC, BD, TL)
Training, Laos
37. Community Outreach
38
IXP workshop, Timor L’este
• Supported 13 NOG and IX events with
presentations, hostmaster consultations,
tech support and sponsorship
• IXP workshop and technical assistance
provided in Timor L’este, resulting in test
case IXP
• J-root instance in APNIC’s co-location
facility
• 3 RIPE Atlas Anchors deployed: BT, KH
and PG (+4 underway NP, MM, IN, MN);
112+ Atlas probes
BKNIX 1
38. Security Outreach
39
• Security training and participation at
27 NOG and CERT events
• Training and support for creation of new
Tonga CERT
• Exploring viability of CERT in Vanuatu
• FIRST Tech Colloquia with APRICOT
2016, SANOG 28, APNIC 42
• 62 security-tagged blog posts published
Adli Wahid
39. blog.apnic.net
40
• Inclusive source of APNIC
community news and views –
352 posts including 80 guest
posts in 2016
• Strong readership growth
continues – monthly average
unique views 16,560 in 2016
(9,741 in 2015)
• Community submissions
welcome!
70% 86%
2016
2015
Views Guest Posts
198,715
116,892
80
43
40. APNIC Foundation
41
• Officially incorporated in Hong Kong in
September 2016
• First year of operation to begin in 2017
Partner & Project Amount
IDRC for Seed Alliance 500,000 CAD
JICA for APNIC Academy 20,000 USD
ITU for IPv6 Training 9,500 USD
ITU for IXP Training 4,300 USD
https://apnic.foundation
This presentation is structured around APNIC’s three core areas of activity
In the top corner of each slide you see an icon to denote which area the activity falls under
This presentation is structured around APNIC’s three core areas of activity
In the top corner of each slide you see an icon to denote which area the activity falls under
APNIC’s Membership continued to grow strongly in 2016 – up 14%
NIR sub account growth was even stronger – up 28%. The combined total at the end of 2016 was 12,624 Members
----
The total direct membership figure for 2015 was 5,268. Total direct membership for 2016 was 5,994, growth of 14%. Quarterly growth for 2016 was stable with around 250 new Members.
There were 6,630 NIR members at the end of 2016.
The strong growth in membership translated through to continued growth in resource consumption – in fact, record levels of demand across IPv4, IPv6 and ASNs
IPv6 growth was certainly the most pleasing – 2016 saw a sharp increase in IPv6 delegations, more than doubling 2015
IPv6 adoption is now gaining strong momentum – notable deployments this year in our region included AIS Fibre in Thailand, FPT here in Viet Nam, Telstra Mobile in Australia, and Reliance Jio in India which is now the biggest IPv6 roll out in the Asia Pacific
-----
Total delegations in 2016 – 1,644
The majority of delegations have been a /32 (71%) which is the default allocation size for providers, followed by /48s which is the default assignment size for end-sites. Most came from normal allocations, instead of one-click.
IPv4 too had a record year of delegations (mostly /22s as per the policy)
The demand for IPv4 hasn’t gone away, and based on current consumption trends I believe APNIC Labs has predicted the remaining IPv4 space will be depleted in around 3-4 years time
----
Total delegations: 3,401
Given the scarcity of IPv4, it’s no surprise that IPv4 transfers continue to rise
Most transfers are still within the APNIC region but the number of Inter-RIR transfers is growing, as you’ll see on the next slide
Source: Center for Applied Internet Data Analysis
APNIC has actively promoted IPv6 / developed IPv6 capacity through training, technical presentations, and working with government policy makers
We remain committed to promoting IPv6 and helping increase its adoption – as I said earlier, there were some notable IPv6 deployments in the region this year, and APNIC was pleased to be able to help provide advice and testing assistance to at least one of those deployments in 2016
It’s not just reaching network operators – APNIC is also active in convincing government policy makers to include IPv6 among their priorities to help drive greater understanding and adoption
Moving on to regional development now
Training continues to be in high demand across the region
In 2016 we visited 25 locations to deliver 62 face to face courses
APNIC was helped in this endeavour by nine community trainers
If you’ve not heard of this initiative, it is something APNIC started last year, and nine recognised technical experts in the region volunteered to help support APNIC’s training by extending its reach
APNIC hopes to expand the number of community trainers in 2017, so if you’re interested in finding out more, get in touch with Nurul, APNIC’s training manager who can tell you more
Supporting NOGs is a great way to reach technical communities, and we have sent technical speakers, systems support, and sponsorship to NOGs to help them to do their work.
We were also excited last year to support the development of Timor-Leste’s IXP, with technical assistance and a workshop
There were not a lot of root server deployments in 2016, in 2017 there will be significantly more
-----
Participation at AusNOG, bdNOG, BTNOG, HKNOG, IDNOG, two NPNOG events, PacNOG, PHNOG, two SANOG events, TWNOG, and VNNOG. Includes 4 ARMS as part of the program for BKNIX, SANOG 27 and 28, and PACNOG 19.
APNIC sponsors NOGs and IXPs in the region to help build technical and human capacity. The MS team complemented this outreach with informational sessions and updates at 18 events in the region.
APNIC was extremely active in the security field in 2016. We know this is very important to Members, and that was confirmed in the APNIC Survey
The knowledge and contacts developed by APNIC’s participation in the security community were brought back to share within the APNIC community – a great example is the hosting of FIRST TC meetings at APNIC conferences but also SANOG and a FIRST-supported training session at PACNOG 19
APNIC is proud to have played a role in helping Tonga establish CERT.to, and this has sparked interest from other Pacific Island states on developing their own security response capabilities
To continue to boost APNIC’s security efforts, a second security specialist will be recruited this year
I hope that we all know about the APNIC Blog by now. If not, it is well worth you making it one of your regular Internet news sites.
These days it’s becoming a hub for community news and views, with great articles from people here in this community and further afield
There’s normally 1-2 new stories each day on the blog, so please do check it out.
Also - The number of guest posts from the community almost doubled last year, so thanks to all of you who have helped.
And if you have an idea for a post that you think the community would like to read, get in touch with Tony, Robbie or Siena in the APNIC comms team.
And I do want to thanks and congratulate that team for a real success here.
The APNIC Foundation was officially incorporated in 2016 and is now up and running
The aim of the Foundation is to secure alternative sources of funding to help support APNIC’s development activities such as training, technical assistance, fellowships, ISIF grants and more
While the Foundation was being created last year, project funding was secured from several partners to help support development activities. It is expected the Foundation will help attract more of this type of funding in 2017 and beyond
APNIC 44 in Taiwan is coming later this year – the website and registration will both be online shortly so stay tuned for more news. We’d love to see you all there
Following APNIC 44, the next two conferences will be in Kathmandu, Nepal, and sunny Noumea, New Caledonia in 2018
Hopefully this report has given you a good snapshot of the year that was, but to stay in touch with what’s happening at APNIC and within the community, visit the blog or any one of APNIC’s social media accounts to learn more