On 6 Nov 2019, at 5:05 PM, Michel Py <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Read this paper. Serious people, funded by ICANN.
> Short : 
> https://www.internetgovernance.org/2019/02/20/report-on-ipv6-get-ready-for-a-mixed-internet-world/
> Long : 
> https://www.internetgovernance.org/wp-content/uploads/IPv6-Migration-Study-final-report.pdf
> The report concludes that legacy IPv4 will coexist with IPv6 indefinitely.

Michel -

I’m quite aware of the report – and I am quoted therein on page 6 arguing a 
very similar point; i.e. that IPv6 may lack sufficient economic incentive to 
overtake IPv4 - 

>>      In comments to the IETF, for example, an engineer from BBN warned that 
>> “As currently envisioned, IPng may not be ambitious enough in the delivery 
>> of new capabilities to compete against IPv4 and the inevitable arrival of 
>> network address translation devices.” (Curran, ​RFC 1669​, 1994).

Indeed, I’ve been doing this for a while, and what you perceive as inactivity 
simply looks to me as slow & steady IPv6 deployment, particular in the last few 
years. 

> The report concludes that legacy IPv4 will coexist with IPv6 indefinitely.

Actually, the report indicates that it is not possible to make "a scientific 
prediction based on knowing all potentially relevant facts. There are too many 
variables and unknowns to be certain about the future course of standards 
evolution in the world for the next 20 years," and then suggests that it would 
be wise for the global Internet technical community to plan for a mixed 
IPv4-IPv6 world for the next 20 years. 

Both of which are quite reasonable statements, but doesn’t mean that IPv6 is a 
failure, it means that transitioning world’s global infrastructure takes a bit 
of time. 
(by way of similar example, consider of the number of fax machines still in use 
today globally, despite the abundance of more functional alternatives for 
decades) 

> ... My network, my rules.

You are correct in that regard - you are free to configure your network 
equipment any way you like…  feel free to use v4/v6/appletalk/decnet/ipx/etc. 
protocols and any addresses that you wish.

However, if you wish to interconnect with others, then you’ll probably want to 
constrain “your network” to the community rules, as that greatly promotes 
interoperability.  There’s some value in interacting with the others in the 
community to establish good policies, since the coordination that you benefit 
from in terms of registry-provided uniqueness has a corresponding cost of 
compliance with the registry policy. 

Thanks!
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers


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