12
APNIC Update Paul Wilson Director General

APNIC Update Paul Wilson Director General. APNIC RIR for Asia Pacific –IP address allocation and management –Open policy development Support for Internet

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

APNIC Update

Paul Wilson

Director General

APNIC

• RIR for Asia Pacific– IP address allocation and management– Open policy development

• Support for Internet development– Training and education – addressing and

operational topics, IPv6 focus– Meetings including APRICOT– Infrastructure – root servers, monitoring etc– Network analysis and reporting– Liaison, cooperation, representation

The last 10 years of APNIC

• Staff numbers grew from 6 to 59 ×6• Office increased from 218 to 1138 sqm ×5• Membership grew from 191 to 1855 ×9• IPv4 allocs grew from 0.29 /8s to 5.26 ×18• The number of RIRs grew from 3 to 5• The number of root servers in the region grew

from 1 to 36, with APNIC supporting 22

APNIC in 2008• Services

– Service improvements – Fifth member and stakeholder survey (2009)

• Communications– APNIC Meetings, training and eLearning– Communications resources – CMS development– Internet Governance activities

• Technical – Resource certification

• Business– Business Continuity Plan– Staff development

Resource Delegations (31 Dec 08)

No of /8 delegated No of /32 delegated

No of delegations

CNNIC273

IDNIC215JPNIC

378

KRNIC125

TWNIC63

VNNIC43

Membership (31 Dec 08)

APNIC members: 1,855

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000

20061362

20071584

20081855

NIR members: 1,097

7

APNIC Surveys 1999 - 2009

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

1999 2001 2004 2007 2009

Num

ber of

res

pond

ents

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Econom

ies

TOTAL ECONOMIES

• 2009 - 601 respondents from 44 economies

Section 1 – Members Top 10• A1-22 APNIC should be involved with activities and events of

operator groups, ISP associations, government and educational• A1-9 Reverse DNS services operate at a high level of quality, usability

and reliability• A1-8 APNIC whois database operates at a high level of quality, usability

and reliability• A1-1 The overall services provided by APNIC are satisfactory• A1-24 APNIC should have higher level representation to liaise with

governments and industry across the region• A1-5 The APNIC helpdesk is easy to contact• A1-6 The APNIC helpdesk provides timely and appropriate responses to

enquiries• A1-16 The APNIC website helps me understand the activities of APNIC• A1-14 APNIC communicates useful and relevant information• A1-13 APNIC should establish an open funding mechanism to

support training and education for organisations in need within

8

Section 2 – Members Top 10• TA2-1. Research and development activities (for example:

network monitoring and measuring, routability testing)• SA2-4. Support network engineering education in the Asia

Pacific region • SA2-6. Support of IPv6 deployment • SA2-1. Expand training activities in scope, geographical

coverage and online options • CA2-2. Increase the support of the community's efforts to adopt

IPv6• SA2-3. Streamline resource requests and allocation processes• TA2-3. Further development of resource certification to

support better routing security • TA2-6. Expand network monitoring, reporting • TA2-2. Develop web services for automated data exchange with

external systems• TA2-5. Deploy more DNS root servers in the Asia Pacific region

9

APNIC on a global stage

• Internet Governance – IGF India– ITU Telecom Asia, Bangkok– OECD Ministerial meeting, Seoul– ICANN meetings

• NRO– Global policy development activities– Cooperation

Challenges for the Future

• IPv4 exhaustion

• IPv6 deployment

• Internet Governance

• Security

• Impact of economic downturn

Thanks