Comparing giving 16 bits for subscribers, which rarely use it or we still have 
no concrete idea how this will be used, the semantic bits on the provider side 
looks more helpful.

Or provider may designate the bit in the lower 16 bits can have some semantics. 
For example, a provider may give every subscriber /48 and appoint that all 
subscribers should use their /48+0000 (48~51 bit) -> a /52 prefix for a certain 
application, like VoIP. Then the provider can inspect all VoIP traffic from 
different subscribers by only set condition 48~51 bit equal to 0000. This 
variation of semantic prefix is also helpful.

Cheers,

Sheng

From: Ted Lemon [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, May 31, 2013 3:29 AM
To: Owen DeLong
Cc: Sheng Jiang; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [v6ops] Could IPv6 address be more than 
locator?//draft-jiang-v6ops-semantic-prefix-03

On May 30, 2013, at 12:08 PM, Owen DeLong 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Not a great assumption... They should need 4 million or more /48s since every 
subscriber is at least one end site and every subscriber end site should 
receive a /48.

I am not in love with using bits from prefixes as semantic tags.   However, 
having said that, I think it's a bit ironic that you're talking about wasting 
space with semantic bits, on the one hand, and talking about the need for a /48 
in every home on the other.   It would be perfectly reasonable for the ISP to 
specify that some of the bits in the /48 have semantic meaning, for example, 
and given that we think it's okay to give the home network a /48, we are hardly 
in a position to quibble about how the bits in that /48 are used.
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