Hi!

On Aug 3, 2012, at 6:32 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr." <o...@ocosa.com> wrote:

> By end user I mean hosting clients (cloud, collocation, shared, dedicated, 
> VPS, etc.) of any sort. For example you have clients that would need....say 
> /24 for their dedicated server. If you charge a $1.00/IP which is typical 
> then you would lose that revenue if they converted to IPv6. If you didn't 
> charge for IPv4 then you have nothing to to lose. 
> 

A possible revenue-recovery model would be to charge say $2 per IP for services 
below a certain resource threshold, for example 1gb vps or larger get free IPs 
and dedicated servers get free IPs.  This helps to increase margin as some 
people will upgrade to more expensive plans to get the free IPv4s.  In hosting 
you can just issue /128s on ipv6 and require upgrades to get larger allocations.

William

> Otis
> 
> ________________________________
> 
> From: Cutler James R [mailto:james.cut...@consultant.com]
> Sent: Fri 8/3/2012 3:48 PM
> To: Otis L. Surratt, Jr.
> Cc: NANOG list
> Subject: Re: IPv6 End User Fee
> 
> 
> 
> On Aug 3, 2012, at 3:22 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr." <o...@ocosa.com> wrote:
>> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>> 
>> <snip/>
>> Otis
>> 
> 
> I can't imagine that this would be anything but counterproductive.  End users 
> are not interested in IPv6 - most would not recognize IPv6 if it fell out of 
> their screen.  End users want working connectivity, not jargon. 
> 
> James R. Cutler
> james.cut...@consultant.com
> 
> 
> 

Sent from my Sprint iPhone

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