Michel,

The Google IPv6 stats page clearly states that their graph indicates the % of 
users who access Google services using IPv6. That means eyeball networks, 
enterprise, non-profit, government, etc. In other words, you might summarize 
this by saying "the Internet".

At 30% of the Internet right now, I'd say IPv6 adoption is looking healthy. The 
next wave might require a little nudge, and a policy like this one might be 
just the thing to help open the eyes of those who - for whatever reason - wish 
to ignore IPv6. The health of the Internet from its inception has originated 
from the cooperation of community members. The economic principle of network 
effects is at work in the adoption of IPv6, so the more on board with IPv6, the 
merrier. 

BTW, I support in principle, though as David Farmer suggested in his recent 
reply, I would also be partial to seeing a policy adaptation like this applied 
to accessing the waiting list as a priority (though not necessarily to the 
exclusion of applying the same to transfers).

Regards,
Matthew

-----Original Message-----
From: ARIN-PPML <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Michel Py
Sent: November 6, 2019 03:04 PM
To: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <[email protected]>; John Curran 
<[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Draft Policy ARIN-2019-19: Require IPv6 Before 
Receiving Section 8 IPv4 Transfers

> JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote :
> 30% of *global* Internet traffic, measured by google, among others.

I get it, the right way to measure the IPv6 part of Internet traffic is at 
Google, which is IPv6 enabled.
Totally scientific.

Geez, I wonder if someone was to measure the Windows market share on desktops 
inside Microsoft, what would they find.

Michel.

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