IPV6 is present, to my knowledge, on all devices on the Verizon IPV6 LTE network. I noticed its using it to communicate to Google for many of it's services when I ran a netstat. I believe they mandated support for it from any certified device.
Unfortunately, it's still firewalled. On Tue, May 22, 2012 at 5:40 PM, Paul Graydon <[email protected]> wrote: > On 05/22/2012 01:21 PM, Cameron Byrne wrote: >> >> On May 22, 2012 4:00 PM, "Paul Porter"<[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Hi NANOG, >>> >>> I'm looking for some information on the four largest US mobile phone >>> carriers and the current state of their IPv6 infrastructure. >>> Specifically, >>> we are trying to figure out: >>> >>> 1. How much of the carrier core and edge for AT&T, Verizon. T-Mobile, >>> and >>> Sprint are on IPv6 now? >> >> Hi, >> >> T-Mobile USA has native ipv6 to all subscribers in all of it's coverage >> area. But, less than 1% of subscribers use IPv6 because they do not have >> an >> IPv6 capable phone. The Nexus S and Galaxy Nexus work well. >> >> This device challenge will improve in time. Samsung is doing a good job >> of >> bringing IPv6 to Android devices. More info here > > That's interesting. I have a Galaxy Nexus on T-Mobile USA and it doesn't > get an IPv6 address, only IPv4. Works fine with IPv6 over my wireless > network at home. Doesn't seem to be anything obvious in the settings to > enable or disable that. > > Paul >

