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{{People-Form
{{People
|portrait=OwenDeLong.jpg
|portrait=OwenDeLong.jpg
|caricature=CaricatureComing1.png
|caricature=OwenDeLongCaricature.jpg
|organization=Akamai Technologies, ARIN AC
|organization=Akamai Technologies
|jobtitle=Senior Network Architect
|jobtitle=Senior Network Architect
|born=06/06/1966
|born=06/06/1966
|region=North America
|region=North America
|country=United States
|country=USA
|stakeholdergroup=Civil Society/Non-Governmental, End User, Private Sector - Domain Name Industry, Private Sector - General Business/Legal, Technical Community
|stakeholdergroup=
|affiliation=ASO, DNSSEC, GNSO, NRO
|affiliation=ASO, DNSSEC, GNSO, NRO
|email=owen@delong.com
|email=owen@delong.com
|newsletter=Subscribe to our Newsletter
|newsletter=Subscribe to our Newsletter
}}
}}
Owen DeLong is currently a Senior Network Architect at Akamai. He also occasionally provides IP-related consulting and training services to other organizations. Owen has been an IPv6 Evangelist and Director of Professional Services at Hurricane Electric, a Senior Backbone Engineer at Exodus Communication before working at Tellme Networks and Netli in both Network Engineering and Operations, a consultant (C2 Company), and Senior Operations Architect at Vusion, Inc. Owen has been an active participant in the ARIN public policy process for more than a decade and has been involved in such landmark efforts as the creation of Provider Independent IPv6, moving the IPv4 PI boundary down to /22 and subsequently /24, special resource policies to assist in the AFRINIC startup, etc. Owen has always believed that ARIN's role is the equitable distribution of IP resources and continues to work toward that end. Owen has a special interest in policy as it relates to IPv4 exhaustion and IPv6 deployment.
'''Owen DeLong''' is currently a Senior Network Architect at [[Akamai]]. He also occasionally provides [[IP]]-related consulting and training services to other organizations. DeLong has been an [[IPv6]] Evangelist and Director of Professional Services at Hurricane Electric, a Senior Backbone Engineer at Exodus Communication before working at Tellme Networks and Netli in both Network Engineering and Operations. A consultant (C2 Company), and Senior Operations Architect at Vusion, Inc. DeLong has been an active participant in the [[ARIN]] public policy process for more than a decade and has been involved in such landmark efforts as the creation of Provider Independent IPv6, moving the [[IPv4]] PI boundary down to /22 and subsequently /24, special resource policies to assist in the [[AfriNIC|AFRINIC]] startup, etc. Owen has always believed that ARIN's role is the equitable distribution of IP resources and continues to work toward that end. Owen has a special interest in policy as it relates to IPv4 exhaustion and IPv6 deployment.
==Career History==
Owen DeLong is currently a Senior Network Architect at Akamai. He also occasionally provides IP-related consulting and training services to other organizations. Owen has been an IPv6 Evangelist and Director of Professional Services at Hurricane Electric, a Senior Backbone Engineer at Exodus Communication before working at Tellme Networks and Netli in both Network Engineering and Operations, a consultant (C2 Company), and Senior Operations Architect at Vusion, Inc. Owen has been an active participant in the ARIN public policy process for more than a decade and has been involved in such landmark efforts as the creation of Provider Independent IPv6, moving the IPv4 PI boundary down to /22 and subsequently /24, special resource policies to assist in the AFRINIC startup, etc. Owen has always believed that ARIN's role is the equitable distribution of IP resources and continues to work toward that end. Owen has a special interest in policy as it relates to IPv4 exhaustion and IPv6 deployment.  


==ICANN and Internet Governance Participation==
[[Category:Technical Community]]
Owen DeLong is currently a Senior Network Architect at Akamai. He also occasionally provides IP-related consulting and training services to other organizations. Owen has been an IPv6 Evangelist and Director of Professional Services at Hurricane Electric, a Senior Backbone Engineer at Exodus Communication before working at Tellme Networks and Netli in both Network Engineering and Operations, a consultant (C2 Company), and Senior Operations Architect at Vusion, Inc. Owen has been an active participant in the ARIN public policy process for more than a decade and has been involved in such landmark efforts as the creation of Provider Independent IPv6, moving the IPv4 PI boundary down to /22 and subsequently /24, special resource policies to assist in the AFRINIC startup, etc. Owen has always believed that ARIN's role is the equitable distribution of IP resources and continues to work toward that end. Owen has a special interest in policy as it relates to IPv4 exhaustion and IPv6 deployment.
[[Category:RIR Community]]
 
==Education==
 
==Publications==
 
==Awards==

Latest revision as of 13:47, 2 July 2021

Organization: Akamai Technologies
Affiliation: ASO, DNSSEC, GNSO, NRO
Region: North America
Country: USA
Email: owen@delong.com

Owen DeLong is currently a Senior Network Architect at Akamai. He also occasionally provides IP-related consulting and training services to other organizations. DeLong has been an IPv6 Evangelist and Director of Professional Services at Hurricane Electric, a Senior Backbone Engineer at Exodus Communication before working at Tellme Networks and Netli in both Network Engineering and Operations. A consultant (C2 Company), and Senior Operations Architect at Vusion, Inc. DeLong has been an active participant in the ARIN public policy process for more than a decade and has been involved in such landmark efforts as the creation of Provider Independent IPv6, moving the IPv4 PI boundary down to /22 and subsequently /24, special resource policies to assist in the AFRINIC startup, etc. Owen has always believed that ARIN's role is the equitable distribution of IP resources and continues to work toward that end. Owen has a special interest in policy as it relates to IPv4 exhaustion and IPv6 deployment.