Go Daddy's IPv6 adoption caused a 1900% jump in subdomain compatibility

*         By Tim Conneally<http://betanews.com/author/TIM/>
*
*

[Description: 
http://betanews.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/shutterstock_76719568-285x300.jpg]
Network services company Infoblox on Monday released the results of a survey 
conducted by The Measurement Factory called the IPv6 Census, which revealed 
that support for IPv6 by .com, .net, and .org zones grew by 1,900 percent in 
one year, thanks in large part to the support by popular registrar GoDaddy.

Last February, the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) announced that 
the last IPv4 addresses had been 
allocated<http://betanews.com/2011/02/03/last-of-ipv4-addresses-assigned-as-focus-turns-to-ipv6/>,
 and that it would only be a matter of time before they ran out.

And in the decade that IPv6 has been around, it's been supported 
by<http://betanews.com/2011/06/08/shields-down-ipv6-is-not-ready-for-attack/> 
software makers, popular web destination owners, and enterprise service 
providers. Having support from Go Daddy means IPv6 now has support from the 
world's largest accredited domain registrar, which is responsible for more than 
50 million domain names.

Still, the massive jolt provided by Go Daddy still only brings total support 
for IPv6 by .com, .net, and .org subdomains up to 25.4 percent. If we were to 
subtract Go Daddy's contribution, there was still growth, but the total support 
would only be around 3 percent.

The survey also found that less than one percent of the zones had IPv6-enabled 
Web servers, and that about two percent of the zones had IPv6-supportive mail 
servers.

Adoption of IPv6 has been glacially slow in certain segments, such as service 
providers. Just two weeks ago, the US' leading ISP, Comcast announced it was 
doing pilot market deployments of 
IPv6<http://betanews.com/2011/11/09/comcast-pushes-ipv6-forward/> for a 
nationwide rollout next year.

Infoblox, however, is targeting domain registrars.

"A significant percentage of businesses run on the registrars' networks, 
relying on the registrars' systems for email and a web presence, which don't 
predominantly support IPv6 yet," the company's announcement said on Monday. "If 
the registrars added IPv6 support for email and web servers, a significant 
impediment to those businesses' enabling IPv6 would be removed and adoption 
gains could jump. If a registrar isn't supporting IPv6, it creates a serious 
obstacle to any business wanting to implement IPv6 for its external content."


Abdelfattah ABUQAYYAS, PhD
ICT  Counselor/  www.citc.gov.sa<blocked::http://www.citc.gov.sa/>
P.O. Box 75606, Riyadh 11588, Saudi Arabia
Mobile +966-556642230; Tel. +966-1-263-9236
Twitter: http://twitter.com/abuqayyas
Facebook: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/edit?trk=hb_tab_pro_top
Google+: https://plus.google.com/115963448911958590335/posts





-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disclaimer:
This message and its attachment, if any, are confidential and may contain 
legally
privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact 
the
sender immediately and delete this message and its attachment, if any, from your
system. You should not copy this message or disclose its contents to any other
person or use it for any purpose. Statements and opinions expressed in this 
e-mail
are those of the sender, and do not necessarily reflect those of the 
Communications
and Information Technology Commission (CITC). CITC accepts no liability for 
damage
caused by this email.

<<inline: image001.jpg>>

_______________________________________________
Menog mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.menog.net/mailman/listinfo/menog

Reply via email to