On 8/8/2022 7:07 AM, Fernando Frediani wrote:
Yes agree it is not possible, but in real practice world it is not reasonable someone with such a large chunk IPv4 address at this stage keep using them for internal proposes, although I hardly believe that is the case.
Actually it is very reasonable. If you have a million IPv4 numbers behind a router that are public, your CPU processing needs on your
firewall or firewalls are vastly lower than if all those million IPv4 numbers are translated. Of course, if you have a million internal hosts you are handling you should absolutely for sure be running IPv6 on all of them.
IPv4 exhaustion to everybody and the feeling I have is that there are still large holders with idle resources for years keeping them for nothing.
I think that the largest holders in the world are the cell phone carriers. I just pulled my phone out, a Samsung S9, and went to www.whatismyip.com. It's public IPv4 is 174.253.195.213. It's public
IPv6 is "Not Detected" That IP is a Verizon number. It is, IMHO, disgraceful that one of the largest cell carriers in North American is still not pushing IPv6 numbers to their subscribers.
In my view that is not a reasonable thing for the entire Internet community. What good does it to do Internet for now or even in long term ?
What is unreasonable is the idiocy of telecommunications companies who claim "internet access is our business" to be still so myopically focused on IPv4 that today, in 2022, worrying about scavenging IPv4 is even still a "thing" Ted _______________________________________________ ARIN-PPML You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List ([email protected]). Unsubscribe or manage your mailing list subscription at: https://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/arin-ppml Please contact [email protected] if you experience any issues.
