AFRINIC: Difference between revisions
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| businesses = | | businesses = | ||
| website = [http://www.afrinic.net/index.htm Afrinic.net] | | website = [http://www.afrinic.net/index.htm Afrinic.net] | ||
| twitter = [http://twitter.com/afrinic] | | twitter = [http://twitter.com/afrinic] | ||
| keypeople = [[Adiel Akplogan]], CEO<br> | | keypeople = [[Adiel Akplogan]], CEO<br> | ||
[[Viv Padayatchy]], Chair<br> | [[Viv Padayatchy]], Chair<br> |
Revision as of 19:02, 20 February 2011
Type: | Non-Government, Non-Profit |
Industry: | Registry |
Founded: | 2000-2004 |
Headquarters: | 11th Floor Raffles Tower Cybercity |
Employees: | >50 |
Website: | Afrinic.net |
Twitter: | [http://twitter.com/afrinic @[1]] |
Key People | |
Adiel Akplogan, CEO Viv Padayatchy, Chair |
AfriNIC is the acronym used for African Network Information Center, which is the Regional Internet Registry of Africa.
Overview[edit | edit source]
All the information concerning African registered resources and domain names can be found within the AfriNIC Whois database; all this information and the AfriNIC database is available to the public for transparency purposes, but it is under copyright.[1]
The Creation of AfriNIC[edit | edit source]
AfriNIC was recognized by ICANN as a functioning regional registry and information center in 2004. Before the creation of AfriNIC all IP Addresses were managed by APNIC, ARIN, and RIPE NCC.[2] The African Network Information Centre (AfriNIC) is a non-governmental and not-for-profit membership based organization. Its main role is to serve as the Regional Internet Registry (RIR) for the African region. [3]
AfriNIC's mission is: ‘’"To provide professional and efficient distribution of Internet number resources to the African Internet community, to support Internet technology usage and development across the continent and strengthen Internet self-governance in Africa by encouraging a participative policy development."’’ [4]
Membership is open to anybody following the registration process. Its policy development process is open to anybody without any specific requirements.[5]
ICANN, IANA and AfriNIC[edit | edit source]
ICANN recognized the provisions of AfriNIC in 2004, and the registry began operating in April, 2005, when it received the first allocation of numbering resources, IP Addresses and Autonomous System Numbers for Africa. Its accreditation made it the 5th RIR Regional Internet Registry, joining ARIN, APNIC, RIPE NCC, and LACNIC. [6] IANA, through an agreement with ICANN, allocates blocks of number resources to all five RIRs, which enables effective communication between networks and Internet traffic all around the world.
IANA has allocated the following IPv4 blocks to AfriNIC: 41/8, 102/8, 105/8 and 197/8;[7] and the following IPv6 blocks: 2001:4200::/23, 2C00:0000::/12.[8]