Hello Carsten,
Am 24.01.24 um 17:31 schrieb Carsten Schiefner:
On 24.01.2024 17:13, Christian Seitz wrote:
[...]
What is your opinion about this?
there is already a thread on this on the AP WG list.
thanks for pointing to the AP WG list. I didn't notice that thread before your
post.
Daniel Suchy's assessment caught my eye; please see his post below.
Yes, there also have been other governments with promises in 2010 to start
rolling out IPv6. If you take a look at the progress today it is still not
there where I personally would have expected it 14 years after the
announcement ;-)
When someone decides to do something there can always happen things that ruin
the entire plan. I think most of us already had some technical issues when
rolling out IPv6 and thought "Am I the first person who is using this
feature?!". Let's hope the announcement will make at least some progress
anywhere. And if that announcement only leads to more IPv6 activities
somewhere else that also helps!
Chris
Cheers,
-C.
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: Re: [address-policy-wg] .cz says bye-bye to IPv4
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:46:51 +0100
From: Daniel Suchy via address-policy-wg <[email protected]>
Reply-To: Daniel Suchy <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
At the government level in Czechia, a regulation was already issued in 2009,
which mandated the mandatory deployment of IPv6 on all services by the end of
2010. it was followed by others in 2013, 2015...
In 2024, the same government which announces the end of IPv6 in 2032 launches
new eGov services that lacks IPv6 support... they simply don't follow that old
regulations either.
It's only PR. The actions of Czech government do not match their words.
- Daniel
--
To unsubscribe from this mailing list, get a password reminder, or change your
subscription options, please visit:
https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-wg