Hallam-Baker, Phillip wrote:
The core assumption here seems to be that NAT is a bad thing so lets get rid of 
NAT rather than trying to make NAT work.
NAT-PT is not NAT. It does a whole lot more, but it *cannot* do what it claims to do completely, because the semantics on the two sides are different, unlike NAT. Dual stack is a better way forwards for the general case. If you read carefully the draft suggests that there may be scenarios in which a modified form of NAT-PT might be useful, so it is hardly extreme NAT bashing.
3) Exactly why should an application be invited to care about this issue?

Because whether the packets pass through a NAT-PT or otherwise affects what the application might expect from the network.

NAT does, for better or for worse, solve some real problems.
NAT-PT makes new problems: Not good news for a transition mechanism and it militates against future improvements to IPv6.

/Elwyn

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