The document summarizes an IPv6 readiness measurement BoF held at APNIC 42. It provides an overview of presentations on IPv6 measurement efforts in various countries and regions including Latin America, Korea, Japan, Sri Lanka, and Taiwan. Data analysis of IPv6 allocation, BGP advertisement, service availability, and user availability from 2011-2016 shows average growth but also variability between regions. The conclusion calls for continued measurement using diverse methodologies to understand IPv6 deployment progress worldwide.
- 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.
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.
APNIC was established in 1993 as a pilot project to handle IP address allocation and registration for the Asia Pacific region. Over the next 20 years, APNIC grew to serve over 1000 members across 24 economies while establishing its permanent headquarters in Brisbane, Australia. Key events included the founding of APRICOT, expanding the membership structure, moving operations to Brisbane, and launching training programs across the Asia Pacific region. APNIC also collaborated with other RIRs and helped deploy additional root nameservers to better serve the region.
- JPNIC provides activities to promote IPv6 adoption such as technical seminars and regional summits.
- JPNIC publishes 63 resource certificates and 248 ROAs, with 3.3% IPv4 and 38.1% IPv6 coverage.
- JPNIC holds open policy meetings and engages with the Japan Network Operators Group (JANOG) to discuss internet resource policies and operations.
APNIC was established in 1993 as a pilot project in Japan to manage internet number resources and provide information for the Asia Pacific region. In the early years it operated with volunteer support and was hosted on a computer at the University of Tokyo. It was later registered in the Seychelles as a non-profit organization and relocated to Brisbane, Australia in 1998. Over time APNIC grew its staff and services, including introducing training programs and technical development resources for members.
The document summarizes an IPv6 readiness measurement BoF held at APNIC 42. It provides an overview of presentations on IPv6 measurement efforts in various countries and regions including Latin America, Korea, Japan, Sri Lanka, and Taiwan. Data analysis of IPv6 allocation, BGP advertisement, service availability, and user availability from 2011-2016 shows average growth but also variability between regions. The conclusion calls for continued measurement using diverse methodologies to understand IPv6 deployment progress worldwide.
- 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.
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.
APNIC was established in 1993 as a pilot project to handle IP address allocation and registration for the Asia Pacific region. Over the next 20 years, APNIC grew to serve over 1000 members across 24 economies while establishing its permanent headquarters in Brisbane, Australia. Key events included the founding of APRICOT, expanding the membership structure, moving operations to Brisbane, and launching training programs across the Asia Pacific region. APNIC also collaborated with other RIRs and helped deploy additional root nameservers to better serve the region.
- JPNIC provides activities to promote IPv6 adoption such as technical seminars and regional summits.
- JPNIC publishes 63 resource certificates and 248 ROAs, with 3.3% IPv4 and 38.1% IPv6 coverage.
- JPNIC holds open policy meetings and engages with the Japan Network Operators Group (JANOG) to discuss internet resource policies and operations.
APNIC was established in 1993 as a pilot project in Japan to manage internet number resources and provide information for the Asia Pacific region. In the early years it operated with volunteer support and was hosted on a computer at the University of Tokyo. It was later registered in the Seychelles as a non-profit organization and relocated to Brisbane, Australia in 1998. Over time APNIC grew its staff and services, including introducing training programs and technical development resources for members.
JPNIC provides an update on their activities including IPv6 and RPKI seminars, engagement with Japanese network operator groups, and statistics on their membership, resource allocation and transfers. JPNIC currently has over 400 members and has distributed over 7.8 million IPv4 addresses and 7,224 IPv6 allocations. JPNIC also reported on the increasing number of 4 byte ASN assignments and over 300 completed IPv4 and ASN market transfers.
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.
ENOG 9 - RIPE vs RIPE NCC from the beginning to after the NTIA transitionHans Petter Holen
- RIPE is the open community that creates Internet number resource policies through consensus-based working groups. RIPE NCC is the not-for-profit membership organization that administers RIPE policies and allocates number resources.
- The US government previously provided oversight of the IANA functions, including global IP address allocation, but announced plans to transition this role. This has prompted a global discussion on developing a proposal for future stewardship of IANA.
- The RIR communities are collaborating through the CRISP team to consolidate their input into a single proposal. This will feed into the ICG, which is responsible for producing a final transition proposal. The key principles are maintaining bottom-up policymaking and
IP addressing policies, What does this mean? - APT Policy and Regulation ForumAPNIC
The document discusses IP addressing policies and IPv4 and IPv6 management by APNIC. It provides an overview of APNIC's role and policy development process. As IPv4 addresses neared exhaustion, APNIC implemented measures like address transfers and restrictions to soften the landing. Policies encouraged IPv6 adoption through allocations and outreach. While barriers remain, continued training and deployment by all stakeholders is needed to fully transition to IPv6.
The document provides updates from the Japan Network Information Center (JPNIC) regarding network statistics, policies, and technical areas from September 2015. Some key points include:
- IPv4 allocations are around 2-3 per month and unchanged, while IPv6 delegations are 1-2 per month and also unchanged.
- 182 IPv4 address blocks were transferred, including the first transfers to other regional registries.
- The 28th JPNIC Open Policy Meeting had around 20 attendees and covered various informational topics, including supporting IPv4 transfers.
- On the technical side, JPNIC is developing systems to deploy reverse DNSSEC services in the second half of 2015 and is piloting an
Introduction to IP Addressing and Regional Internet RegistriesRIPE NCC
The document provides an overview of the Internet registry system and IP addressing. It discusses the roles of the RIPE NCC, IANA, ICANN and other regional Internet registries in managing and distributing IP addresses and autonomous system numbers. It also describes the basics of IPv4 and IPv6 addressing and the ongoing transition from IPv4 to IPv6 to address the limited remaining supply of IPv4 addresses.
Regional Policy Development Process Report as presented by Einar Bohlin 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
LACNIC Report, by Sergio Rojas [APNIC 38 / Global Reports]APNIC
- The document reports on LACNIC membership and resource allocation trends from 2002-2014. Membership has grown steadily over this period from 158 to over 4000 currently.
- IPv4 address space held by LACNIC is nearly exhausted, with just over 3 million addresses remaining. Two blocks have been reserved for soft-landing and new members.
- IPv6 allocation and assignment has increased substantially in recent years, with over 70% of LACNIC members now holding IPv6 addresses. Outreach efforts aim to promote transition to IPv6 as IPv4 exhaustion approaches.
This document discusses the role and importance of National Network Operator Groups (NOGs) in supporting local internet communities. It notes that many early European Internet Exchange Points (IXPs) grew out of small operator communities. While IXP meetings were useful, they became too IXP-centric and did not allow discussion of other technical topics. NOGs emerged as a way to allow local operators to discuss regulations, technical limitations, and do business with one another. The RIPE NCC supports NOGs by providing annual funding and advice. While NOGs work well in many regions, cultural and geographic factors can limit their effectiveness in some areas like the Middle East. The document focuses on the growth and success of the Greek NOG community.
APNIC Focus Group and Survey Action Plan, by Sanjaya [APNIC 38 / AMM]APNIC
The document outlines an action plan in response to feedback from APNIC member surveys and focus groups. Key themes from members included improving value/fees, transparency, member services, training, communications, and community engagement. The plan proposes actions like reviewing fees and billing cycles, increasing transparency through strategic planning documents and financial reporting, developing a services roadmap, examining training needs and options, boosting communications through new initiatives, and supporting networking groups. Next steps include developing 2015-2016 activity plans around these actions and publishing an online tracker to update progress.
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.
APNIC Senior Trainer Tashi Phuntsho gives an update on IPv6 deployment in Bhutan and the region, noting that the true driver for IPv6 adoption is the mobile Internet.
Aaron Hughes from 6connect gave a presentation on IPv6 provisioning and automation. 6connect specializes in provisioning automation tools including IPAM, DNS, DHCP, and other services. Hughes discussed 6connect's experience with customers implementing IPv6, including that 100% of customers are implementing IPv6 and 17% of traffic is now IPv6. He also covered challenges with IPv6 measurement and adoption.
IPv6 readiness among APEC TEL member economiesAPNIC
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.
Michael Martin has over 20 years of experience in land surveying, mapping, and project leadership. He is currently a Land Surveyor in Training seeking licensure. His experience includes preparing surveys, maps, legal descriptions, and addressing project issues for utilities, engineering firms, and developers. He is skilled in managing projects, meeting deadlines, and collaborating with stakeholders.
Paulina Jayne Perakis is a singer-songwriter earning her degree in Music Business from Belmont University. She has extensive songwriting experience, having co-written songs with numerous hit songwriters. She is the owner of three LLCs involved in music promotion, publishing, and recording. Perakis has performed over 150 shows nationwide as a solo artist and opener for major country artists. She maintains an active online presence and community involvement through charitable organizations.
JPNIC provides an update on their activities including IPv6 and RPKI seminars, engagement with Japanese network operator groups, and statistics on their membership, resource allocation and transfers. JPNIC currently has over 400 members and has distributed over 7.8 million IPv4 addresses and 7,224 IPv6 allocations. JPNIC also reported on the increasing number of 4 byte ASN assignments and over 300 completed IPv4 and ASN market transfers.
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.
ENOG 9 - RIPE vs RIPE NCC from the beginning to after the NTIA transitionHans Petter Holen
- RIPE is the open community that creates Internet number resource policies through consensus-based working groups. RIPE NCC is the not-for-profit membership organization that administers RIPE policies and allocates number resources.
- The US government previously provided oversight of the IANA functions, including global IP address allocation, but announced plans to transition this role. This has prompted a global discussion on developing a proposal for future stewardship of IANA.
- The RIR communities are collaborating through the CRISP team to consolidate their input into a single proposal. This will feed into the ICG, which is responsible for producing a final transition proposal. The key principles are maintaining bottom-up policymaking and
IP addressing policies, What does this mean? - APT Policy and Regulation ForumAPNIC
The document discusses IP addressing policies and IPv4 and IPv6 management by APNIC. It provides an overview of APNIC's role and policy development process. As IPv4 addresses neared exhaustion, APNIC implemented measures like address transfers and restrictions to soften the landing. Policies encouraged IPv6 adoption through allocations and outreach. While barriers remain, continued training and deployment by all stakeholders is needed to fully transition to IPv6.
The document provides updates from the Japan Network Information Center (JPNIC) regarding network statistics, policies, and technical areas from September 2015. Some key points include:
- IPv4 allocations are around 2-3 per month and unchanged, while IPv6 delegations are 1-2 per month and also unchanged.
- 182 IPv4 address blocks were transferred, including the first transfers to other regional registries.
- The 28th JPNIC Open Policy Meeting had around 20 attendees and covered various informational topics, including supporting IPv4 transfers.
- On the technical side, JPNIC is developing systems to deploy reverse DNSSEC services in the second half of 2015 and is piloting an
Introduction to IP Addressing and Regional Internet RegistriesRIPE NCC
The document provides an overview of the Internet registry system and IP addressing. It discusses the roles of the RIPE NCC, IANA, ICANN and other regional Internet registries in managing and distributing IP addresses and autonomous system numbers. It also describes the basics of IPv4 and IPv6 addressing and the ongoing transition from IPv4 to IPv6 to address the limited remaining supply of IPv4 addresses.
Regional Policy Development Process Report as presented by Einar Bohlin 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
LACNIC Report, by Sergio Rojas [APNIC 38 / Global Reports]APNIC
- The document reports on LACNIC membership and resource allocation trends from 2002-2014. Membership has grown steadily over this period from 158 to over 4000 currently.
- IPv4 address space held by LACNIC is nearly exhausted, with just over 3 million addresses remaining. Two blocks have been reserved for soft-landing and new members.
- IPv6 allocation and assignment has increased substantially in recent years, with over 70% of LACNIC members now holding IPv6 addresses. Outreach efforts aim to promote transition to IPv6 as IPv4 exhaustion approaches.
This document discusses the role and importance of National Network Operator Groups (NOGs) in supporting local internet communities. It notes that many early European Internet Exchange Points (IXPs) grew out of small operator communities. While IXP meetings were useful, they became too IXP-centric and did not allow discussion of other technical topics. NOGs emerged as a way to allow local operators to discuss regulations, technical limitations, and do business with one another. The RIPE NCC supports NOGs by providing annual funding and advice. While NOGs work well in many regions, cultural and geographic factors can limit their effectiveness in some areas like the Middle East. The document focuses on the growth and success of the Greek NOG community.
APNIC Focus Group and Survey Action Plan, by Sanjaya [APNIC 38 / AMM]APNIC
The document outlines an action plan in response to feedback from APNIC member surveys and focus groups. Key themes from members included improving value/fees, transparency, member services, training, communications, and community engagement. The plan proposes actions like reviewing fees and billing cycles, increasing transparency through strategic planning documents and financial reporting, developing a services roadmap, examining training needs and options, boosting communications through new initiatives, and supporting networking groups. Next steps include developing 2015-2016 activity plans around these actions and publishing an online tracker to update progress.
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.
APNIC Senior Trainer Tashi Phuntsho gives an update on IPv6 deployment in Bhutan and the region, noting that the true driver for IPv6 adoption is the mobile Internet.
Aaron Hughes from 6connect gave a presentation on IPv6 provisioning and automation. 6connect specializes in provisioning automation tools including IPAM, DNS, DHCP, and other services. Hughes discussed 6connect's experience with customers implementing IPv6, including that 100% of customers are implementing IPv6 and 17% of traffic is now IPv6. He also covered challenges with IPv6 measurement and adoption.
IPv6 readiness among APEC TEL member economiesAPNIC
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.
Michael Martin has over 20 years of experience in land surveying, mapping, and project leadership. He is currently a Land Surveyor in Training seeking licensure. His experience includes preparing surveys, maps, legal descriptions, and addressing project issues for utilities, engineering firms, and developers. He is skilled in managing projects, meeting deadlines, and collaborating with stakeholders.
Paulina Jayne Perakis is a singer-songwriter earning her degree in Music Business from Belmont University. She has extensive songwriting experience, having co-written songs with numerous hit songwriters. She is the owner of three LLCs involved in music promotion, publishing, and recording. Perakis has performed over 150 shows nationwide as a solo artist and opener for major country artists. She maintains an active online presence and community involvement through charitable organizations.
This document provides a user manual for PubMed, describing how to use its search engine, filters, advanced search features, and other tools. Section II explains how to perform basic searches and search for authors. Section III covers using filters to narrow search results. Section IV details advanced search options. Section V overviews tools like My Collections for saving articles. The document provides screenshots and step-by-step instructions for common PubMed tasks.
Este documento presenta una amplia gama de productos de ventilación y extracción industrial y comercial, incluyendo extractores centrífugos, cajas de ventilación, extractores axiales, ventiladores tubulares, campanas extractoras, ductos y rejillas. Los productos varían en tamaño, potencia, caudal y aplicaciones como cocinas, procesos industriales, almacenes, locales comerciales y más. El documento también describe servicios de instalación, mantenimiento y diseño.
El documento propone un modelo de educación a distancia que consta de cinco dimensiones: la intencional, que se refiere a los propósitos del proceso educativo; la personal, compuesta por los actores como alumnos y maestros; la pedagógica, que incluye contenidos y métodos entre alumno y maestro; la estructural organizativa, conformada por la infraestructura para impartir el programa; y la contextual, referida al entorno donde funciona el programa.
This document provides a summary of qualifications and work experience for Patricia Nichols. She has over 15 years of experience in training development, process implementation, and project management. Her skills include needs assessments, performance evaluations, instructional design, and developing effective training solutions. She has successfully managed multiple projects simultaneously for Fortune 500 clients.
This document provides an overview of the Resource Public Key Infrastructure (RPKI) and includes the following key points:
RPKI allows internet registries to digitally certify IP address and autonomous system (AS) number allocations and assignments. This helps validate routing data and prevent unintended route origination. The certificates are stored in repositories that network devices can access to validate routing information.
RPKI is gaining adoption worldwide as more internet registries and network operators participate. The RIPE region currently has the most resource certificates and route origin authorizations (ROAs) issued. Events and tutorials have helped drive increased usage in different regions over time. Monitoring and visualization tools also help observe global RPKI deployment status.
Internet Routing Registry and RPKI Tutorial, by Nurul Islam Roman [APNIC 38]APNIC
The document provides an introduction to Internet routing registries (IRRs) and the APNIC Routing Registry. It explains key concepts such as autonomous systems (AS), routing policies, and the Routing Policy Specification Language (RPSL) used to define routing objects and policies in IRRs. The document also outlines the benefits of using the APNIC Routing Registry to define routing policies and filtering requirements between networks and autonomous systems.
RPKI is a system that provides validation of IP address and AS number ownership through the use of digital certificates. It aims to reduce routing leaks and hijacking by allowing routers to verify that the origin AS of a route matches what is published in the RPKI database. The key components of RPKI are trust anchors maintained by Regional Internet Registries, Route Origin Authorizations (ROA) that are published by network operators, and validators that check BGP routes against the ROA database.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help boost feelings of calmness, happiness and focus.
Este documento es un registro de clase de la Universidad de las Californias Internacional sobre el 7mo curso de comercio internacional. El documento lista el tema de la clase como distribución, transporte y seguros e incluye los nombres del profesor y de los 5 estudiantes que asistieron a la clase el 17 de noviembre de 2015 en Tijuana, B.C.
This document is a CompTIA certification for Brett Greenwell that expires on February 15, 2019. It contains an identification code of SNVL7X53LGF15E9X that can be used to verify the certification online at http://verify.CompTIA.org.
IPv6 outreach efforts in Japan, by Hiroki Kawabata.
A presentation given at APRICOT 2016’s IPv6 Readiness Measurement BoF and APIPv6TF session on 24 February 2016.
JPNIC provided an update on their activities including:
- Member and resource statistics showing growth in IPv6 adoption
- Distribution of IPv4 and IPv6 address space and ASNs assigned
- Activities such as IPv6 technical seminars, open policy meetings, and securing DNSSEC in reverse zones
- Details on IPv4 and ASN market transfers between registries
AFRINIC Update by Patrisse Deesse [APRICOT 2015]APNIC
AFRINIC is celebrating its 10th anniversary. Adiel Akplogan is stepping down after 10 years as CEO, and Patrisse Deesse has been appointed interim CEO. AFRINIC membership has grown to over 1,100 members, and it has distributed over 12 million IPv4 addresses and 3 million IPv6 addresses in 2014. AFRINIC is working on various projects including DNS anycast, a new WHOIS system, and capacity building programs in Africa. It aims to have 250 network probes and 11 anchors for its ATLAS project by 2016.
- JPNIC conducted outreach on the upcoming DNSSEC KSK rollover to ensure resolvers are updated and prepared for increased traffic. They provided documentation in Japanese and engaged with media.
- JPNIC held training courses on RPKI and has 51 resource certificates published, covering 3.9% of IPv4 space. They are configured as a subordinate CA under APNIC.
- JPNIC engages with the Japanese network operators group JANOG through involvement in various committees and activities to collaborate with regional ISPs.
- JPNIC holds an open policy meeting annually and a technical seminar on IPv6 to improve operator knowledge. They also coordinate the Japan Internet Governance Forum.
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.
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.
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.
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.
- JPNIC hosted and collaborated on several IPv6 events in Japan in 2018-2019 to promote IPv6 adoption, including seminars, summits, and regional events.
- JPNIC publishes around 70 resource certificates and 257 ROAs for RPKI and sees steady growth in coverage over time. Training courses are also provided.
- JPNIC holds an open policy meeting annually to discuss topics like DNSSEC and IPv6 deployment in Asia and provide information on resource policies.
- JPNIC collaborates with other communities on events and works with VNNIC on initiatives. It will also host ICANN64 in Kobe, Japan in March 2019.
- Statistics provided on member/resource growth,
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.
- Japan has made progress in IPv6 adoption, with around 40% of users able to connect via IPv6, mainly through major ISPs. However, mobile operators only recently started IPv6 in mid-2016 to 2017, and content providers have been indifferent.
- Government organizations like the IPv6 Promotion Council and MIC are working with private organizations to increase IPv6 deployment through initiatives like regional summits and technical seminars. While core internet services are supported, widespread adoption across all sectors has yet to be fully realized.
The document discusses the need for organizations to adopt IPv6 before the depletion of IPv4 addresses. It notes that IPv4 addresses are projected to be exhausted in April 2011, while only 5% remain unallocated. The Regional Internet Registry RIPE NCC works to raise awareness of this issue and help organizations obtain IPv6 allocations. It also engages stakeholders through various forums and meetings to facilitate the transition to IPv6.
Srinivas Chendi from APNIC provided an update on topics including:
1) IPv4 and IPv6 address delegations trends in the Asia Pacific region showing growth.
2) New policies implemented in 2012 including sparse allocation guidelines for IPv6 and removing multihoming requirements.
3) Services offered by APNIC like training, measurement labs, and a grants program to support innovation.
4) An APNIC member survey showed high satisfaction with services and priorities for the future.
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.
The RIPE NCC is continuing to grow its membership and expand its regional presence. It is seeing increasing transfers of IPv4 addresses as IPv6 adoption gains momentum. The RIPE NCC is working on policy developments, outreach, and Internet governance issues. It is also focusing on areas like protecting against hijacks, IPv6 training, and the IANA transition process.
Policy Development Process/Internet Eco System by Adam GoslingMyNOG
This document provides a summary of a presentation given by Adam Gosling on policy development at APNIC. It begins with an introduction of APNIC as the regional internet registry for the Asia Pacific region and describes its role and multistakeholder policy development process. It then discusses recent policy proposals that reached consensus, including on distributing returned IPv4 addresses and transferring AS numbers. The presentation concludes with an overview of APNIC's involvement in the broader internet governance landscape and collaborations with organizations like the NRO and engagement with governments.
LACNIC report as presented by Sergio Rojas 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
Honeypots Unveiled: Proactive Defense Tactics for Cyber Security, Phoenix Sum...APNIC
Adli Wahid, Senior Internet Security Specialist at APNIC, delivered a presentation titled 'Honeypots Unveiled: Proactive Defense Tactics for Cyber Security' at the Phoenix Summit held in Dhaka, Bangladesh from 23 to 24 May 2024.
Securing BGP: Operational Strategies and Best Practices for Network Defenders...APNIC
Md. Zobair Khan,
Network Analyst and Technical Trainer at APNIC, presented 'Securing BGP: Operational Strategies and Best Practices for Network Defenders' at the Phoenix Summit held in Dhaka, Bangladesh from 23 to 24 May 2024.
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.
HijackLoader Evolution: Interactive Process HollowingDonato Onofri
CrowdStrike researchers have identified a HijackLoader (aka IDAT Loader) sample that employs sophisticated evasion techniques to enhance the complexity of the threat. HijackLoader, an increasingly popular tool among adversaries for deploying additional payloads and tooling, continues to evolve as its developers experiment and enhance its capabilities.
In their analysis of a recent HijackLoader sample, CrowdStrike researchers discovered new techniques designed to increase the defense evasion capabilities of the loader. The malware developer used a standard process hollowing technique coupled with an additional trigger that was activated by the parent process writing to a pipe. This new approach, called "Interactive Process Hollowing", has the potential to make defense evasion stealthier.