RIPE NCC General Meeting May 2008
Biographies of Executive Board Candidates
Fahad AlShirawi
Biography
Fahad is the Managing Director of 2Connect. Established in 2004,
2Connect is a leading telecommunications service provider in the Middle
East.
Fahad also serves as a Board Director at the Bahrain Internet Exchange
(BIX), is Chairman of the Organising Committee of the Middle East
Network Operators Group (MENOG) and was appointed as a Board Member
representing the Kingdom of Bahrain at the Arab Regional ISP & DSP
Association (ARISPA).
Fahad is an active Member of RIPE NCC and an avid supporter of all
things Internet.
Motivation
Fahad is passionate about his work and the impact on the region and its
growth. He's constantly advocated communication as a catalyst for
economic growth and believes the Internet to be at the core of such
growth. Fahad spends most of his time in non-profit initiatives that
promote those passions.
Joao Luis Silva Damas
Biography
Joao Luis Silva Damas (Joao Damas) has been involved with RIPE since
1997, joining the RIPE NCC as network engineer. Joao left the RIPE NCC
in 2003, at the time being the CTO, to work for Internet Systems
Consortium (ISC) as Senior Programme manager, being involved in network
operations, DNS operations (including F.root-servers.net and
ns-ext.isc.org), and progressing BIND, as well as performing public
benefit work in various areas.
He has continued to be active in RIPE as Chairman of the Routing WG
since 2003 and beginning in 2004 putting together the programme for the
RIPE Meeting plenary, aka European Operators Forum (EOF).
Joao also participates in work at other RIR communities, mainly at
LACNIC and APNIC, and in the IETF.
In 2008, together with colleagues, launched the ESNOG group and
corresponding meetings, bringing together Spanish ISPs to interact with
each other.
Motivation
While currently not working for an LIR, Joao would like to be in the
RIPE NCC Association's board seeking to represent LIRs at large in the
RIPE region, without regard to nationality, language or business type.
Joao is fully committed to the stability and progress of the RIPE NCC,
both as an RIR and in its broader Network Coordination function.
The preservation of the Internet bottom-up self-regulatory processes
needs the stability provided by an established and yet dynamic entity
and I will contribute to that by all possible means.
Joao is an easy target to approach at many international meetings and
via email.
For more detailed information, have a look at
http://www.c-l-i.net/joao/ripe-2008
Ian Meikle
Biography
I joined the Internet community when employed by Nominet, the .uk ccTLD
Registry, in 2000. My main responsibility at Nominet is ensuring
continuity of the services that we offer to registrars and the wider
community. This includes the domain name registration process, DNS and
whois. I am also responsible for the Nominet network, which underlies
these services and I was instrumental in Nominet becoming an LIR. As a
result we have joined several Internet Exchanges, where we operate an
open peering policy.
I have attended RIPE meetings since 2001 and recently became a co-chair
for the Test Traffic Working Group. I am also a member of the UKNOF
programme committee. I represent Nominet, and vote, at the RIPE NCC GMs
and other industry meetings.
Nominet has changed a great deal since I started and, as the Systems
Administration Manager, I have been closely involved in the change
process. Though still a not-for-profit organisation we have faced up to
the commercial challenges of diversification through the move to
providing ENUM registration. I would like to bring my experience of
working within a similar registry, during a period of change to bear on
the challenges the RIPE NCC faces.
Motivation
My vision for the RIPE NCC is for it to become more strategic in the
approach it takes towards its responsibilities.
The diminishing pool of IPv4 resources presents a big challenge for all
the RIRs. RIPE NCC has the advantage of an established community to help
deal with this. First and foremost I want to ensure that the coming
re-distribution of addresses is equitable.
Besides the big change in IP address distribution I want to focus the
NCC on its corporate responsibility, to ensure it is giving something
back. Not just to LIRs but also the wider community.
The Internet is a vital part of global industry. Some of the services
that the NCC operates, notably K root, should be recognised as Critical
Infrastructure. I want to push for that to happen.
I am also keen to improve the way the NCC communicates, both in terms of
technology and the way it uses language.
Kees Neggers
Biography
Kees Neggers is Managing Director of SURFnet, the national research and
education network in the Netherlands. He has been one of the leaders in
the development of international research networking and the Internet
since the mid-eighties. He was involved as an initiator and Board member
in several international network related organisations such as RARE,
RIPE NCC, TERENA, Ebone and the Internet Society.
Present positions held in Internet-related international activities
include Chairman of the RIPE NCC Executive Board, European Co-Chair of
the Coordinating Committee for Intercontinental Research Networking
(CCIRN), Chairperson of the Global Lambda Integrated Facility (GLIF),
Co-Chair of the Global Ring Network for Advanced Applications
Development (GLORIAD) and Member of the Board of the Internet
Educational Equal Access Foundation (IEEAF).
Jim Reid
Biography
Jim is a freelance DNS consultant who spends too much time writing or
reviewing policy documents, RFPs and contracts instead of tinkering with
name server configurations. He has advised governments and other
regulatory bodies about Internet governance matters and technology
trends. His work has entailed close liaison with ICANN, government
officials, law enforcement, IPR lawyers and the UK Information
Commissioner's Office. Jim was a founding director of the UK ENUM
Consortium, the non-profit industry group responsible for the oversight
of ENUM in the UK.
He is co-chair of the DNS Working Group and founded the ENUM Working
Group. He has just completed a 3 year term on the RIPE NCC Executive Board.
Jim has worked for Internet start-ups, academia, non-profit industry
associations as well as a multinational company and an international
treaty organisation. He owns and runs a small consulting company.
Max Tulyev
Biography
All of his career since 1999 Max has been linked with Internet Service
Providers (ISPs), from user support up to being a small business holder.
In 2003 Max moved to Moscow, Russia, and worked for Garant-Park-Telecom
(.RU and .SU registrar). Max established the .RU DNSSEC test bench and
IPv6 connectivity at Garant-Park-Telecom. In 2006 he moved back to Kiev,
Ukraine to focus his work on his own ISP, NetAssist LLC, now an extra
large LIR. It is also the first ISP in Ukraine to have an IPv6 block
with IPv6 Internet connectivity.
Max has experience of cooperating with RIPE and the RIPE NCC since 1999.
His hobbies are spelestology, travel and the Internet.
Motivation
The main motivation for me is that the Internet is a really interesting
thing :)
Probably, IPv4 space will be ended when I'll be the RIPE NCC Executive
Board member. It will not be a good time for the Internet, but we have
some time to prepare. Things that are OK now will not work later.
First, all policies should be checked to see that we can enforce them.
If there is some we can't, we should initiate policy change or implement
enforcement schemes. The most important is an ability to take back
really unused space. Implementation of RIPE DB actuality checks is a
must. Also, we should check new requests much more strictly because of
IP squatters. For this, communication with authorities should be
enhanced (i.e. do these companies really exist, etc.). As our company is
registering a lot of PI networks dealing with a lot of customers, I have
experience in how to fix some security holes.
Second is the legal aspect. After all free IPv4 space is exhausted, we
should expect a lot of time to be spent in courts, so the group of RIPE
NCC lawyers should be enhanced.
Third is IPv6 migration. From my point of view, if at least half of the
resources (not ISPs, not users) are not be accessible through the IPv6
network when IPv4 is exhausted, migration to IPv6 will have failed. So
we need to do some steps to help and to motivate resources (hosters,
filestores, etc.) to move to IPv6.
Andreas Wittkemper
Biography
Andreas Wittkemper is employed by Verizon Business Germany where he is
responsible for the worldwide domain registration for all Verizon EMEA
customers. He maintains the relationship with various NICs such as
DENIC, EUrid, Nominet and many others. He is also the RIPE contact for
Verizon Business. His career at a commercial ISP started in 1996 when he
joined EUnet Germany as a hostmaster and he is leading the Expertise
Centre DNS & IP team within Verizon EMEA now.
Andreas has been involved with RIPE since RIPE 31 in Edinburgh. From
1998 on he has attended all RIPE Meetings and has seen the growth that
happened over the years to the RIPE NCC and the community. He is
representing and voting for Verizon at the General Meetings since 2003
and is in regular contact with Executive Board members and RIPE NCC key
staff.
Motivation
Andreas strongly believes in the community process and that RIPE should
stay independent from international regulatory frameworks. In light of
the IPv4 address space depletion, Andreas recognises the RIPE community
as the driving force behind the upcoming redistribution policy. This
policy will have to fairly consider not only the interests of major
stakeholders but those of the community at large. Andreas is ready to
invest a considerable amount of his time in the work at the Board and he
has the backing of his employer for this.
We updated this page on
2 May 2008
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