> > Would it make you feel more certain if the ULA-Cs were
> > self-generated by sites exactly as in (RFC4193, Section 3.2)
> > and then "registered" with a central authority that would
> > register the address as long as it is not a duplicate? I
> > don't think ('draft-ietf-ipv6-ula-central', Section 3.2)
> > currently says that, but it seems like it would result in
> > a scenario that is no worse than for RFC4193 yet with a
> > central authority accountable for certifying uniqueness. 
> 
> Certainly not.  I have even less confidence that everyone else
> will play by this rule than I do in the competence of the
> putative central registry.

Expanding on this point just a little bit, I should say that I
AM as confident that locally-generated ULA-Cs will fail to collide
as I am confident that locally-generated ULAs will fail to collide.
But the presumed warm, fuzzy feeling one might get from "registering"
these locally-generated ULA-Cs is an illusion we shouldn't promote.
-- George Mitchell

> The chance of a collision between randomly-generated prefixes
> is REALLY, REALLY, REALLY small -- MUCH smaller than the
> probability of any real world event you would care to cite.
> -- George Mitchell
> 
> > That said, I would be astonished if this idea has not been
> > entertained and debated before.
> >
> > Thanks - Fred
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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