Hi,

> I want to ask everyone on the list: Which facts prevent a scaling experiment 
> with the aim of global production state? In my opinion a /16-EID-prefix is 
> perfect for that goal.

The problem is in that what you describe depends on public PITRs, and we have 
seen how badly that worked for 6to4 public relays. Running a public relay costs 
money (equipment, maintenance, bandwidth), and when nobody pays for them then 
we cannot expect any decent quality. And LISP will be blamed and seen as an 
unreliable protocol, just like 6to4. Relying on public relays is a very bad 
idea.

Now, if some big tier-1 transit networks start running production quality PxTRs 
(because PxTRs attract traffic, and their customers pay for traffic) then I can 
see some possibilities. If the LISP traffic volume increases then other 
networks might also start running PxTRs so they don't have to pay their 
transits for it, and then we are getting somewhere. But as long as 'public 
PxTR' means 'someone with good intentions but no real responsibility' then this 
will be a dangerous experiment for LISP...

Cheers,
Sander

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