4. IPv6 Delegations
4
Cumulative
Delegations
Allocation
Assignment
3,500
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
By delegation type
/30-/31
/32
/43-/47
/48
By size
One-click
Normal
By request type
In 2014
0
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Statistics as at 31 August
5. IPv4 Delegations
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
Jan-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Apr-14
May-14
Jun-14
Jul-14
Aug-14
Recovered Pool
103/8
5
From 103
pool
From
recovered
pool
/24
/23
/22
NIR
New
Existing
By pool By size By Member
Statistics as at 31 August
6. IPv4 Transfers
20
18
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
Jan-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Apr-14
May-14
Jun-14
Jul-14
Aug-14
Inter-RIR
Intra-RIR
6
Used
Did not use
Using listing service
Used
Remaining
Pre-approval usage
Statistics as at 31 August
7. ASN Assignments
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Jan-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Apr-14
May-14
Jun-14
Jul-14
Aug-14
4-byte
2-byte
7
2-byte
4-byte
By type
Rejected
Accepted
4-byte return rate
2 byte
4 byte
Global ASN use
Statistics as at 31 August
8. APNIC Membership
8
Statistics as at 31 August
5000
4500
4000
3500
3000
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
XL
VL
L
M
S
VS
AS
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
10. Whois Development
Collaborative project with RIPE
NCC and AFRINIC on adapting
RIPE Whois
Lowers overall development and
maintenance costs for Whois
Improves quality control = a better
experience for Whois users
Edward Shryane, RIPE NCC
11. Whois Stats
11
APNIC Whois servers answer 175
queries per second
(17% increase on 2013’s 150
queries per second)
87% of Members have created
their IRT contacts (June 2014)
13. MyAPNIC Improvements
13
Improved
Contact tab –
includes new
EC
submission
form
Allows you to
track your
correspondence
14. Supporting Infrastructure
14
Deployment of VMware
virtualisation and Puppet
configuration management
for scalability and disaster
recovery
Development of public API
for improved access to
APNIC statistics
15. Accountability & Transparency
15
ISO9001 external audit –
passed!
Improved internal financial
audit process established
Appointment of new external
financial auditors
RIR accountability matrix
Updated Transparency web
page
17. APNIC Training
17
v v
v
v
v
Courses
20 Classroom
24 Online
Professionals
1,826 trained
Video
archives
63 videos
135,516 views
Statistics as at 31 August
v
19. Community Development
19
Engineering Assistance
Projects in Bhutan,
Laos, Tuvalu, Vanuatu
MoU with ICANN for L-root
servers in the Asia
Pacific
33 Fellowships
supported for APRICOT
2014 & APNIC 38
New Youth Fellowship
Program for APNIC 38 –
2 Fellows
SANOG
SANOG
L-root MoU signing
22. Policy Implementations
22
16 April prop-107: AS number transfer proposal
7 May
27 May
prop-109: Allocate 1.0.0.0/24 and 1.1.1.0/24
to APNIC Labs as Research Prefixes
prop-105: Distribution of returned IPv4
address blocks (Modification of prop-088)
23. APNIC Events
23
Regional meetings to
expand participation
opportunities
Expanded and improved
online conference
experience at APRICOT
2014
Expanded community
meetings at APNIC 38:
APTLD, Pacific
Workshop, ISOC
New HD cameras for
APNIC 38 web stream
Trialling remote
stenography
APNIC 38
ARM 3
ARM 2
APRICOT 2015
24. IPv6 in the Region
24
593 professionals trained
Presented at 14 industry
events
Generated 26 pieces of IPv6
media coverage
Joint IPv6 workshops with ITU
Geoff Huston
25. Security Outreach
25
Participation in NOGs,
CERTs and LEA events
to educate and learn
Promoting emerging
security initiatives
among Members
Training for Pacific
LEAs held in Auckland
Adli Wahid
Craig Ng
26. APNIC Labs
26
2014
Research statistics and evidence to help the
APNIC community make more informed
technical decisions
IPv4 IPv6 DNS BGP
Creating a unified data access
platform for all measurement
Continuous improvement of IPv6
and DNS measurements
• Name collision
• PMTU
• RTT
• NAT & CGN
27. ISIF Asia Awards and Grants
Supporting technical innovation
for socio-economic development
in the Asia Pacific
Awards Grants Economies
5 from 93
12 from 139
applications
applications
Cook Islands, Kiribati, New Zealand, Tuvalu, India,
Australia/Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Micronesia,
Vietnam, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Philippines, Vanuatu
27
29. Global Cooperation
29
IPv6 advocacy and CGN
education
Coordination with RIRs and
Internet organizations
Engaging with government
agencies and LEAs in training
and skills development
Supporting IANA Stewardship
Transition
Explaining the RIR model
30. IANA Stewardship Transition
30
IANA Stewardship Transition by Sep 2015
Oct 2013
Montevideo
statement signed
Jan 2014
EC endorsed
statement
Mar 2014
NTIA announces
intention to transfer
IANA functions
Jul 2014
Paul Wilson & Adiel
Akplogan
nominated to ICG.
ICG 1st meeting
Sep 2014
ICG 2nd meeting
June 2014
NRO Response to
ICANN
Accountability
Feb 2014
Community
consultation @
APRICOT 2014
May 2014
NRO Response to
transition process &
principles
Sep 2014
Community
consultation @
APNIC 38
31. Community Engagement
31
Training
NOGS
APNIC Events
IPv6
Security
Cooperation
As at 31 August
32. APNIC Survey 2014
32
6.15
5.91
Assessment of APNIC performance in general
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
A5.1 Assessment on APNIC on
Quality of services
A5.2 Assessment on APNIC on
Value of services &
membership
Mean
Focus Groups held in 17
economies
1,039 Survey responses –
thank you!
Responses from 56
economies
Reports available:
www.apnic.net/survey
33. Improving Communication
33
Our goal: Provide clear information
where you want to read it
New APNIC Blog – more relaxed
language, richer content,
community participation
‘Event wraps’ for clear reporting of
APNIC event activities
More active social media + APNIC
is now on Weibo!
Updated APNIC background videos
Website refresh – more to come!
Reflects APNIC’s vision of a “global, open, stable and secure Internet that serves the entire Asia Pacific community:
Serving APNIC Members
Supporting Internet development in the AP region
Collaborating with the Internet community
Reflects APNIC’s vision of a “global, open, stable and secure Internet that serves the entire Asia Pacific community:
Serving APNIC Members
Supporting Internet development in the AP region
Collaborating with the Internet community
Since Jan 2014, the delegation rate for IPv6 has been quite stable, and we can see that the majority of delegations have been a /32 (65%) 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.
Since the advent of the recovered pool, there has been a marked increase in IPv4 requests. The majority… interestingly still by existing Members (17%), with slightly more new Members (23%), which is to be expected. 42% of requests have come from the recovered pool and 58% from the last /8 pool. Unsurprisingly, the majority of the v4 delegations are /22s, which is the maximum allowed by the policy.
IPv4 Transfers remain steady as well, however, we are starting to see some transfers from ARIN to NIR members. 51% of Members are utilising the listing service. 70% of pre-approvals remaining indicates we still have many Members who are looking for sources to transfer from
It is good to note that the return rate for 4-byte is very low (4%), which illustrates acceptance of 4-byte ASN in the region. Overall, 69% of ASNs are 4-byte. 4-byte uptake has been quite good in the region with 70% of new Members using 4-byte now.
The total membership figure for 2013 is 4,051. As at 31 August 2014, we now have a total of 4,450 Members, an increase of 8.9% from 2013.
Engineering assistance is offered to network operators that require specific technical assistance, such as how to deploy IPv6 deployment more effectively. It is provided on a cost recovery basis.
In addition to the existing partnership with F, I and K-root operator, APNIC recently signed an MoU with ICANN to help distribute L-root servers in the AP region
We provided 33 fellowship combined for APRICOT 2014 and APNIC 38. Fellows are given financial assistance on travel, accommodation and daily expenses.
We provided our first youth fellowship in APNIC 38.
The PDP is central to APNIC Community activities
Supporting the PDP is a core Secretariat function
APNIC support for the PDP includes
SIG Chair support
Host Mailing list, Remote Participation
Provide documentation and editorial support
Implementation and implementation reports
Support currently provided by Adam Gosling
Assigning one (or two) additional staff members
Will be trained in all aspects of PDP support
Will assist Adam, or provide back-up as required
Policy SIG Chairs must consider several inputs
Mailing list discussion
Comments during the meeting
Comments from electronic chat
To assist, Chairs usually request a show of hands
Remote participation difficult to gauge without counting
We don’t count: a show of hands is a ‘temperature of the room’
Internally, a SIG process was launched for secretariat staff to use and understand the bottom up decision making process and procedures. This mechanism is now a formal channel for secretariat decisions about improving the workplace where possible.
At the policy chair’s request, we prototyped an online system to gauge consensus, and it was trialled at the Policy SIG yesterday. The trial outcome will be reported by the Policy SIG chair.
16 April 2014
prop-107: AS number transfer policy proposal
Permits the intra- and inter-regional transfer of ASNs
7 May 2014
prop-109: Allocate 1.0.0.0/24 and 1.1.1.0/24 to APNIC Labs as Research Prefixes
Delegates 1.0.0.0/24 and 1.1.1.0/24 to APNIC for use by APNIC Labs
27 May 2014
prop-105: Distribution of returned IPv4 address blocks (Modification of prop-088)
Proposal to allow the distribution of IPv4 address blocks delegated to APNIC as a result of the “Global policy for post exhaustion IPv4 allocation mechanisms by the IANA”.
This is great for Members who have been able to get another small delegation of IPv4 space.
Conference and regional meetings to provide forums for interested stakeholders to discuss networking issues and trends, gather for the Policy SIG, network, and learn. APNIC Regional Meetings serve as a teaser to the main APNIC Conference. Three held so far, fourth to be held later this year.
We also made improvements on APRICOT and APNIC conferences. We expanded social media and online coverage at APRICOT 2014. In APNIC 38 Brisbane, we expanded the community meetings that now include APTLD, Pacific Workshop, and ISOC meetings. This is in addition to the existing support for APIX and APCERT meetings.
HD quality YouTube Live webcast is used for the first time at APNIC 38. We also trialled remote stenography, to improve efficiency and cost effectiveness of our conferences’ live captioning service.
Outreach and training events in the region.
Appointed security specialist, Adli Wahid, who is working with different teams within APNIC as well as building relationship with potential and new partners that APNIC can leverage.
Build capability through training, providing content on security at APNIC and LEA training
Participation in NOGs, inter-governmental forums, CERTS etc
Highlighting relevant initiatives to Members to improve security such as IRT objects in whois, RPKI, and SAVE (BCP 38)
SQL backed data
===============
Labs now uses PostGres as a backend to its IPv6, BGP and DNSSEC data. The same code is used to present "google chart API" based graphs and tables of data being collected, with a consistent URL form for all three collections. As we add more datasets, we will be extending this model.
More details at http://labs.apnic.net/blabs/?p=479
DNS related measurements
=======================
Research on un-delegated name collision issues was undertaken for ICANN and has been presented at the ICANN DNS workshops. We are exploring mechanisms to investigate DNSSEC signing with different algorithms, and large packet risks with small MTU Internet links (Tunnels, firewalls)
Information Sharing
===================
Ongoing research is published at labs.apnic.net and has been presented at IETF meetings, RIR meetings and NOG meetings, as well as DNS specialist workshops (DNS-OARC, ICANN DNSSEC workshops) All presentations are published at labs.apnic.net.
Three projects received additional mentoring on evaluation and communications (India, Cook Islands and Cambodia)
Two site visits conducted in India (Tezpur and Mumbai)
Reflects APNIC’s vision of a “global, open, stable and secure Internet that serves the entire Asia Pacific community:
Serving APNIC Members
Supporting Internet development in the AP region
Collaborating with the Internet community
Our key global coordination activities during this period are:
Providing IPv6 advocacy, and education to the wider community on how a widespread of Carrier Grade NAT (CGN) would negatively impact the performance and security of the Internet
We continue to work closely with I* organisation to ensure smooth technical coordination that is critical to the Internet operation
We continue to encourage governments to focus on capacity building, particularly on human resources Internet related training and skill development
We represent the Internet number registry position, based on our own community consultation, at the IANA stewardship transition process
We continue to promote the value of multi-stakeholder model in developing the Internet
Continuing to engage and collaborate with intergovernmental and governmental organizations
PTC 14, Hawaii
4th APT Prep Meeting for WTDC-14, Bangkok, Thailand
WSIS+10 3rd MPP, Switzerland
MAG, Switzerland
ICANN 49, Singapore
WTDC-14, UAE
PITA AGM, Vanuatu
APEC TEL 49, China
WSIS Forum, Switzerland
APT Cybersecurity Forum, Mongolia
OECD CISP Working Group Meeting, France
ICANN 50 UK
SATRC-15, Bhutan
AuIGF, Australia
APrIGF, India
IGF, Turkey
ADF-11, Brunei
Asia Pacific ICT Ministerial meeting, Brunei
PacINET, Cook Islands
IETF 89, London, UK
IETF 90, Toronto, Canada
NetHui, Auckland, NZ
VNNIC OPM, Hanoi, Vietnam
NetMundial Iniative for Internet Governance Cooperation and Development, Geneva
ACMA 3rd Prep Meeting for PP-14, Canberra, Australia
11 AP Telecommunication and ICT Development Forum (ADF-11), Brunei,
Y4IT Youth Congress, Manila, Philippines
AP ICT Ministerial Meeting, Brunei
APEC TEL 50, Brisbane, Australia
Montevideo Statement:
Signed by ICANN, IETF, IAB, W3C, ISOC and 5 RIRS
Warned against Internet fragmentation
Catalyze community-wide efforts toward the evolution of global multistakeholder Internet cooperation
Globalization of the the ICANN and IANA functions where all stakeholders participate on an equal footing
Transition to IPv6 must remain a key priority globally.
IANA Transfer
Will replace existing IANA Contract with new arrangements to be implemented by September of 2015. Expected since the establishment of ICANN, in 1999.
ICG have had their first F2F meeting on 17-18 July. See: https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/coordination-group-resources-2014-07-18-en. Second F2F meeting is 6 Sept after IGF in Istanbul.
In summary, in 2014 we continue to serve and meet our Members in their various economies, engage with the wider AP communities, and collaborate with the globel Internet stakeholders.
Compared to 2012 Survey
Quality of services increased from 5.71 to 6.15 (7.7%)
Value of services and membership increased from 5.34 to 5.91 (10.
Website refresh accords with Corporate Identity
Event wraps help us be more transparent to our Members
APNIC has setup a Weibo account for improved outreach to Chinese speaking (is this the appropriate term?) communities
We updated the videos that describes APNIC background
This will be a big event, another one we run in conjunction with APAN.