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IPv6 allocation plan, security, and 6-to-4 conversion
> On Jan 30, 2015, at 18:07 , William Herrin <bill at herrin.us> wrote:
>
> On Fri, Jan 30, 2015 at 8:44 PM, Owen DeLong <owen at delong.com> wrote:
>> I guess it depends on your definition of ubiquitous, but to me, when a protocol
>> has the majority of the deployed addresses, I think it counts for this purpose.
>
> LOL, Owen, IPv6 had that with the first /64 ethernet LAN it was used on.
If you want to nit-pick, by â??deployed addressesâ??, I mean addresses actually deployed on hosts and being used for cummunications.
This was a really stupid nit, even for you.
> How about this: when Verizon starts decommissioning its IPv4
> infrastructure on the basis that IPv6 is widespread enough to no
> longer require the expense of dual-stack, IPv6 will have achieved
> ubiquity.
Um, no. The judgment of one traditional telephone company is hardly where I would look to contemplate the future of the internet.
Heck, to a large degree, Verizon hasnâ??t even figured out how to do IPv6 for FIOS customers yet, let alone their DSL subscribers.
Really not the shining example I would turn to. No. Certainly not the worst, but definitely not the leader, either.
Owen
- References:
- IPv6 allocation plan, security, and 6-to-4 conversion
- From: elouie at techintegrity.com (Eric Louie)
- IPv6 allocation plan, security, and 6-to-4 conversion
- From: bill at herrin.us (William Herrin)
- IPv6 allocation plan, security, and 6-to-4 conversion
- From: tore at fud.no (Tore Anderson)
- IPv6 allocation plan, security, and 6-to-4 conversion
- From: bill at herrin.us (William Herrin)
- IPv6 allocation plan, security, and 6-to-4 conversion
- From: owen at delong.com (Owen DeLong)
- IPv6 allocation plan, security, and 6-to-4 conversion
- From: bill at herrin.us (William Herrin)