This document discusses measurement data and tools provided by RIPE NCC. It describes registry data from the regional internet registries and internet routing registry. It also describes routing data collected from RIPE NCC's Routing Information Service with over 18 collectors. Further, it discusses RIPE Atlas, a global network for internet measurements with over 10,000 probes. Tools like RIPEstat and visualizations are described that provide access and visualization of this measurement data.
Peering Lessons – 5 year Service Provider JourneyInternet Society
Liquid Telecom operates the largest fiber network in Africa, spanning 18,000 km. They actively peer with internet exchange points (IXPs) across Africa and Europe to lower latency and increase throughput. Peering has grown Liquid Telecom's intra-African traffic significantly faster than traffic between Africa and Europe. As more peers connect directly through IXPs, Liquid Telecom now routes over half of its inbound traffic via peering arrangements rather than transit agreements, reducing costs and improving performance for users. Continued expansion of IXPs and adherence to intellectual property laws can further drive traffic shifts from transit to peering.
Taking stock - integration at Oxfam. Integration: breaking down the silos con...CharityComms
Jack Lundie, communications director, Oxfam GB
Visit the CharityComms website to view slides from past events, see what events we have coming up and to check out what else we do: www.charitycomms.org.uk
The document discusses SWIFT's role in supporting the development of Moscow as an International Financial Center (MIFC). It provides background on SWIFT's global presence and growth in Russia. It then outlines the goals and organizational structure of the MIFC project, including working groups established to focus on key areas. Finally, it describes how SWIFT can contribute its experience in supporting other IFCs, standardized financial messaging platform, and ambition to increase its role in domestic Russian payments and securities markets to further the development of the MIFC.
- The RIPE NCC is experiencing continued growth in membership, with over 18,000 LIRs currently. This is driving increased demand for IPv4 addresses, with the RIPE NCC expecting to run out of its IPv4 pool within the next 2-3 years.
- In 2017, 21 million IPv4 addresses were transferred within the RIPE NCC service region, though most of these were administrative transfers between related entities, with only 4.6 million addresses transferring between unrelated LIRs on the open market.
- The RIPE NCC is working to support capacity building, academic engagement, policy development, and compliance with new regulations like GDPR. It is also monitoring issues like the growth of the
infoShare 2013: Alexander Shulgin - Starting, running and growing new IT comp...Infoshare
The document provides an overview of the Russian IT market and opportunities for foreign companies. Some key points:
- Russia has a large online population and fast growing e-commerce and mobile markets, with many internet and technology users.
- Major cities like Moscow and St. Petersburg have strong IT education and a large pool of skilled programmers available at relatively high salaries.
- The country aims to become a global IT hub and has initiatives like technoparks and accelerators to support startups and innovation.
- While copyright laws still need improvement, there are also opportunities to partner with Russian companies and test new solutions in a fast-moving market environment. Overall the document outlines Russia's potential as a destination for IT
NRO Activities Report by Axel Pawlik at ARIN 36. Presentation and video archives at: https://www.arin.net/participate/meetings/reports/ARIN_36/ppm.html
This document discusses measurement data and tools provided by RIPE NCC. It describes registry data from the regional internet registries and internet routing registry. It also describes routing data collected from RIPE NCC's Routing Information Service with over 18 collectors. Further, it discusses RIPE Atlas, a global network for internet measurements with over 10,000 probes. Tools like RIPEstat and visualizations are described that provide access and visualization of this measurement data.
Peering Lessons – 5 year Service Provider JourneyInternet Society
Liquid Telecom operates the largest fiber network in Africa, spanning 18,000 km. They actively peer with internet exchange points (IXPs) across Africa and Europe to lower latency and increase throughput. Peering has grown Liquid Telecom's intra-African traffic significantly faster than traffic between Africa and Europe. As more peers connect directly through IXPs, Liquid Telecom now routes over half of its inbound traffic via peering arrangements rather than transit agreements, reducing costs and improving performance for users. Continued expansion of IXPs and adherence to intellectual property laws can further drive traffic shifts from transit to peering.
Taking stock - integration at Oxfam. Integration: breaking down the silos con...CharityComms
Jack Lundie, communications director, Oxfam GB
Visit the CharityComms website to view slides from past events, see what events we have coming up and to check out what else we do: www.charitycomms.org.uk
The document discusses SWIFT's role in supporting the development of Moscow as an International Financial Center (MIFC). It provides background on SWIFT's global presence and growth in Russia. It then outlines the goals and organizational structure of the MIFC project, including working groups established to focus on key areas. Finally, it describes how SWIFT can contribute its experience in supporting other IFCs, standardized financial messaging platform, and ambition to increase its role in domestic Russian payments and securities markets to further the development of the MIFC.
- The RIPE NCC is experiencing continued growth in membership, with over 18,000 LIRs currently. This is driving increased demand for IPv4 addresses, with the RIPE NCC expecting to run out of its IPv4 pool within the next 2-3 years.
- In 2017, 21 million IPv4 addresses were transferred within the RIPE NCC service region, though most of these were administrative transfers between related entities, with only 4.6 million addresses transferring between unrelated LIRs on the open market.
- The RIPE NCC is working to support capacity building, academic engagement, policy development, and compliance with new regulations like GDPR. It is also monitoring issues like the growth of the
infoShare 2013: Alexander Shulgin - Starting, running and growing new IT comp...Infoshare
The document provides an overview of the Russian IT market and opportunities for foreign companies. Some key points:
- Russia has a large online population and fast growing e-commerce and mobile markets, with many internet and technology users.
- Major cities like Moscow and St. Petersburg have strong IT education and a large pool of skilled programmers available at relatively high salaries.
- The country aims to become a global IT hub and has initiatives like technoparks and accelerators to support startups and innovation.
- While copyright laws still need improvement, there are also opportunities to partner with Russian companies and test new solutions in a fast-moving market environment. Overall the document outlines Russia's potential as a destination for IT
NRO Activities Report by Axel Pawlik at ARIN 36. Presentation and video archives at: https://www.arin.net/participate/meetings/reports/ARIN_36/ppm.html
A short version of our legendary report about e-commerce in Russia. Specially designed for international players to get an understand of this fast-growing market, its opportunities, and its challenges. (EWDN.COM)
The document announces the Russian PPP Week 2014 conference taking place from March 11-13 in Moscow to promote public-private partnerships in Russia through presentations on successful PPP projects and policies, panel discussions, and networking opportunities for over 600 participants from government, business and other organizations.
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This document provides information about the ICT cluster in St. Petersburg, Russia. It details that the ICT cluster includes over 300 companies and exports over $750 million annually. Some of the key industries include software and IT services, with over 17,000 software developers in the talent pool. The document also lists several major international R&D centers and top ICT companies located in St. Petersburg and provides an overview of the supporting institutions and infrastructure for ICT entrepreneurs and startups in the region.
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The eDays E-Commerce Conference is an international event dedicated to Russian e-commerce. It focuses on the most important industry trends and developments in both their domestic and cross-border dimensions, and highlights the related operational aspects.
In 2018 the Kharkiv IT Cluster launched and conducted a business-research among IT companies together with the sociological survey in the field, in order to understand and evaluate the current state of the Kharkiv IT market from several points of view: volume, employment, and development perspectives, as well as to find its strength and special features.
The online retail market in Russia reached $16.5 billion in 2013, growing by around 30% annually. Around 30 million Russians shopped online for physical goods. While still lagging major European countries, internet penetration in Russia is growing rapidly at over 10% per year. The largest segments are household appliances, electronics, clothing, shoes and accessories. The market is dominated by Moscow and St. Petersburg, but regional e-commerce is growing fast as internet access expands across Russia.
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The document provides an overview of statistics and facts about the Russian Internet from the site infact.ru. It discusses common figures such as audience size and broadband usage. It profiles the major players in the Russian Internet market such as Yandex, Mail.ru, Vkontakte, and Odnoklassniki. It also examines global companies that have lost out in the Russian Internet market such as Yahoo, Facebook, and eBay. Finally, it provides some miscellaneous facts about the Russian Internet landscape.
The document provides an update on activities from the Number Resource Organization (NRO). It discusses the NRO's role in coordinating the regional internet registries (RIRs) and its focus areas such as global collaboration, internet governance, and monitoring number resources. It also summarizes the NRO's finances, participation in the Internet Governance Forum, discussions regarding ICANN and the IANA transition process, and improvements to the Address Supporting Organization (ASO).
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.
The NRO presentation provided updates on the NRO's activities in 2014-2015, including its role coordinating the regional internet registries (RIRs) and involvement in internet governance discussions. Key points included:
1) The NRO coordinates activities between the RIRs, contributes to internet governance forums, and fulfills the role of ICANN's Address Supporting Organization.
2) In 2014, the NRO focused on global collaboration, monitoring internet governance, and supporting the RIR coordination groups.
3) Upcoming activities include continued involvement in the IANA transition process and the ICANN Accountability discussions.
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.
Network Measurements and Tools for Researchers and OperatorsRIPE NCC
The document provides an overview of the RIPE NCC and the services and tools it provides for network measurements, accessing data and statistics, and further research. It discusses RIPE Atlas, an active measurement network with thousands of probes run by volunteers; RIPEstat, a tool that provides routing, IP, and other data in one interface with graphical widgets; and RIPE Labs, a community platform for sharing research, measurements, and tools with others in the field.
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
A short version of our legendary report about e-commerce in Russia. Specially designed for international players to get an understand of this fast-growing market, its opportunities, and its challenges. (EWDN.COM)
The document announces the Russian PPP Week 2014 conference taking place from March 11-13 in Moscow to promote public-private partnerships in Russia through presentations on successful PPP projects and policies, panel discussions, and networking opportunities for over 600 participants from government, business and other organizations.
The document provides an update on activities of the Number Resource Organization (NRO). It summarizes that the NRO supports coordination between the Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), engages globally on internet governance issues, and fulfills the role of ICANN's Address Supporting Organization (ASO). Key areas of focus for the NRO include supporting RIR coordination, global collaboration, and monitoring internet governance discussions. It provides details on NRO leadership, finances, activities like participating in the Internet Governance Forum, and improvements to accountability and operations.
This document provides information about the ICT cluster in St. Petersburg, Russia. It details that the ICT cluster includes over 300 companies and exports over $750 million annually. Some of the key industries include software and IT services, with over 17,000 software developers in the talent pool. The document also lists several major international R&D centers and top ICT companies located in St. Petersburg and provides an overview of the supporting institutions and infrastructure for ICT entrepreneurs and startups in the region.
The document summarizes information about Dr. Ilya Munerman, an associate professor and founder of a management company in Russia. It discusses Munerman's experience and qualifications in real estate appraisal and business valuation, as well as his educational work. The document then outlines some positive trends in the Russian real estate market, as well as challenges related to infrastructure, finance, and data/modeling. It proposes using data mining and advanced analytics techniques on various open and statutory data sources to develop better real estate models and tools for the Russian market.
The eDays E-Commerce Conference is an international event dedicated to Russian e-commerce. It focuses on the most important industry trends and developments in both their domestic and cross-border dimensions, and highlights the related operational aspects.
In 2018 the Kharkiv IT Cluster launched and conducted a business-research among IT companies together with the sociological survey in the field, in order to understand and evaluate the current state of the Kharkiv IT market from several points of view: volume, employment, and development perspectives, as well as to find its strength and special features.
The online retail market in Russia reached $16.5 billion in 2013, growing by around 30% annually. Around 30 million Russians shopped online for physical goods. While still lagging major European countries, internet penetration in Russia is growing rapidly at over 10% per year. The largest segments are household appliances, electronics, clothing, shoes and accessories. The market is dominated by Moscow and St. Petersburg, but regional e-commerce is growing fast as internet access expands across Russia.
The document summarizes activities of the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) Russia. IAB Russia is part of the global IAB network and works to develop standards and research for Russia's online advertising market. It holds industry events and provides education/training. Members include companies and industry experts. IAB Russia has been active since 2011 establishing standards, research reports, and events to advance the Russian digital advertising sector.
This document summarizes Paul Rendek's presentation at the NIX.CZ meeting on November 24, 2016. The presentation discussed the history of internet development in the Czech Republic, the changing makeup of RIPE NCC members, key moments for internet governance following the IANA transition, and challenges around securing an open internet framework with the rise of IoT technologies. Rendek emphasized the importance of building strong local technical communities to own debates on issues central to their work and influence in policy discussions.
The document provides an overview of statistics and facts about the Russian Internet from the site infact.ru. It discusses common figures such as audience size and broadband usage. It profiles the major players in the Russian Internet market such as Yandex, Mail.ru, Vkontakte, and Odnoklassniki. It also examines global companies that have lost out in the Russian Internet market such as Yahoo, Facebook, and eBay. Finally, it provides some miscellaneous facts about the Russian Internet landscape.
The document provides an update on activities from the Number Resource Organization (NRO). It discusses the NRO's role in coordinating the regional internet registries (RIRs) and its focus areas such as global collaboration, internet governance, and monitoring number resources. It also summarizes the NRO's finances, participation in the Internet Governance Forum, discussions regarding ICANN and the IANA transition process, and improvements to the Address Supporting Organization (ASO).
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.
The NRO presentation provided updates on the NRO's activities in 2014-2015, including its role coordinating the regional internet registries (RIRs) and involvement in internet governance discussions. Key points included:
1) The NRO coordinates activities between the RIRs, contributes to internet governance forums, and fulfills the role of ICANN's Address Supporting Organization.
2) In 2014, the NRO focused on global collaboration, monitoring internet governance, and supporting the RIR coordination groups.
3) Upcoming activities include continued involvement in the IANA transition process and the ICANN Accountability discussions.
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.
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The document provides an overview of the RIPE NCC and the services and tools it provides for network measurements, accessing data and statistics, and further research. It discusses RIPE Atlas, an active measurement network with thousands of probes run by volunteers; RIPEstat, a tool that provides routing, IP, and other data in one interface with graphical widgets; and RIPE Labs, a community platform for sharing research, measurements, and tools with others in the field.
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
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Ready to Unlock the Power of Blockchain!Toptal Tech
Imagine a world where data flows freely, yet remains secure. A world where trust is built into the fabric of every transaction. This is the promise of blockchain, a revolutionary technology poised to reshape our digital landscape.
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1. .RU/.РФ in 2015:
Taking stock
and looking ahead
An update for 2nd Central Asia Internet Symposium
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
2 March 2016
Andrey Romanov
Coordination Center .RU/.РФ
2. NEW FOUNDERS, NEW BODIES,
NEW CEO, SAME SPIRIT
Council
Director
Russian Association of Networks and Services (RANS)- NGO NPO, Technical
Union of Internet Operators- NGO NPO, Technical
Regional Center of Internet Technologies- NPO, Technical
Russian Institute for Public Networks (RIPN)- NPO, Academic
Ministry of Telecom and Mass Communications of the Russian Federation- Gov’t
Institute of Internet Development- NPO, At-Large
Board of Founders
3. 2015! What a Year!
• Number of challenges …but
• …new opportunities …
4. 2015! Challenges…
• Low domain price (less than 1 dollar, because of Ruble drop)
Low prices are attractive for cybercriminals
Russian Registrars can sell gTLDs with more profit
• Few Registrars
34 Registrars and more than 6, 000 .000 domains
2 Registrars hold 76% of the market
• Falling Rub
The same revenue and soaring costs
Wrong time to raise prices
• Lack of domestic soft- and hardware manufacturers
We are used to use foreign equipment
Prices for equipment about 2 times higher than 2years ago
5. 2016! New opportunities…
• Cooperation with Registrars
More active Registrars get more benefits
Joint promotion campaigns
On-condition marketing actions (Registrars should sign up
for a campaign)
• Investigating to choose new technical platform
• Education: lectures, articles, awareness raising
• R&D, and launch of new services
• Looking for new markets
10. EVENTS IN 2015
7 April, 2015, Moscow – the 6th Russian
Internet Governance Forum (RIGF).
Almost 500 participants from 27 countries.
8–11 September, 2015, Yerevan, Armenia
– TLDCON 2015 (the 8th International
conference for ccTLD registries and
registrars of CIS, Central and Eastern
Europe)
12. PLANS FOR 2016
Improved Inter-Registrar Transfer Procedure in .RU and .РФ
Efforts to increase the number of accredited registrars across Russia –
wide
In-house MS Committees on:
- Intellectual Property;
- Internet Governance;
- Infrastructure;
- Regulatory
The Registrars’ Committee
13. INTERNATIONAL EVENTS IN 2016
7 April 2016, Moscow – the 7th Russian Internet Governance Forum
(RIGF-2016)
7-8 September 2016, Tbilisi, Georgia – the 9th International
conference for ccTLD registries and registrars of CIS, Central and
Eastern Europe (TLDCON-2016)
14. SOCIAL AND EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES
The First All-Russia IP & IT Law Contest (in
collaboration with the Moscow State Law University).
The 5th nationwide «Study the Internet – Govern it!»
online competition
The Positive Content competition (award for the
best educational websites for children and youth)
Dot-Journalism Award (award for journalists that
keep their readers, listeners and viewers informed on
the domain industry in Russia as well as on safer
Internet browsing and legal aspects of using the
global network)
Thank you, Chair. Hello everyone. My name is Andrey Vorobyev. I am a new CEO of .RU. It is my pleasure to update you on our activities. Please excuse my rusty English, because I came from the registrar community, and we usually do not talk much, as we are busy with registrations.
The managing structure of .RU has recently changed.
We now have a multistakeholder Board that represents 6 founding organizations. The Board nominates the Council and the CEO and is the supreme Body. The Council adopts our budget and other policies
В России изменилось законодательство о некоммерческих организациях. В результате этого изменилась и структура организации. Высшим органом управления становится Совет Учредителей. Кроме того, нужно отметить, что в состав учредителей вошли два новых участника. Это Министерство связи и массовых коммуникаций Российской Федерации и Институт развития Интернета. Министерство связи России в представлениях не нуждается. Институт развития Интернета – это вновь созданная в 2015 году по инициативе участников интернет-рынка организаций. Создание этой организации а также ее цели и задачи были согласованы с российским Президентом Владимиром Путиным во время его встречи с представителями отрасли весной 2014 года. Основной задачей Института стала формирования дорожных карт развития Интернета в России.
Last year was not an easy year. It brought a number of challenges, caused first of all by recent changes in the market landscape economy. Anyway, we see new opportunities and actively try to use them
Last year was not an easy year. It brought a number of challenges, caused first of all by recent changes in the market landscape economy. Anyway, we see new opportunities and actively try to use them
Last year was not an easy year. It brought a number of challenges, caused first of all by recent changes in the market landscape economy. Anyway, we see new opportunities and actively try to use them
Here are some statistics
As you can see, after a slight drop in 2014, in 2015 .RU showed a positive dynamic growing 3.7%
We took a special pride with passing the 5 million mark…
It took us 3 years since we passed 4 mln in 2012
The domain name number 5 million has been registered by a lady from the city Ryazan, the medium-size city located 250 kilometers south from Moscow. Than lady’s name is Lilia, she is designer as you can see from the domain name - roominstyle.ru We invited Lilia to the one of the biggest Internet industry events and presented her the special diploma.
Посмотри вариант фото на след слайде. Только хорошо бы поля подрезать, но я не умею
We took a special pride with passing the 5 million mark…
It took us 3 years since we passed 4 mln in 2012
The domain name number 5 million has been registered by a lady from the city Ryazan, the medium-size city located 250 kilometers south from Moscow. Than lady’s name is Lilia, she is designer as you can see from the domain name - roominstyle.ru We invited Lilia to the one of the biggest Internet industry events and presented her the special diploma.
…as also did .RF…
In 2015 we hosted our traditional major international events in Moscow and the CIS…
The first one was Russian Internet Governance Forum held traditionally in Moscow in April
The second event was the International Conference for Registries and Registrars. Each year the conference is organized in a new location. This year we went to Erevan, the capital of Armenia to enjoy the Armenian hospitality, Armenian food and famous Armenian cognac
Пестрит этот слайд
Может убрать спонсоров? – см вариант на след слайде
And we are going to make sure the business goes as usual.
Here are our major projects for this year.
We are going to change the Inter-registrar Transfer Procedure. The purpose is to improve user experience by getting rid of paperwork and removing unnecessary barriers that registrars sometimes create. The auth code will be used for the domain name holder identification. The overall schema has been discussed and approved and we start the technical implementation.
Another our goal is to ensure geographical diversity of our registrars. Currently most of the registrars are located in Moscow, some – in other cities of the central part of Russia, but there are none of them behind the Ural mountains. We want to fix that and the first Siberian registrar from Novosibirsk has just come on-board
We also set up number of new multi-stakeholder committees – you can see them marked in red. This committees consist from experts and there purpose is to discuss current trends and to provide expertise and advice to the management, in other words - to make sure the community has its word on our operation.
The Registrar committee was founded many years ago as stakeholder body of registrars. It has been always involved into discussion on policies and procedures regarding the domain name registration. Registrars participate in working groups that discuss changes in Domain name registration rules, provide feedback on the drafts of the documents. However today we see the proactive initiatives from registrar community and we are glad to welcome them
And we will host our traditional events and invite you to take part in them of course
Еще раз про те же мероприятия, стоит ли повторяться? Предлагаю сказать дин раз – про прошедшие и будущие вместе
We also promote important social initiatives for the nation and you can see some of them on the slide behind me.
Some of this activities, like Positive content, have a multiyear story. The others are very new – for example IP&IT Law contest we run for the first time. It has been launched in the end of 2015 and we are exited to see the first winners by April
That’s all for now, and I am happy to take questions.