Hi Christopher,

I think you are a bit conservative on using IPv6. 🙂

The objective of this policy proposal is not to ask for allocating large IPv6 
block to IoT. I believe minimum allocation or assignment size will meet the 
requirements from IoT industry.

Best regards,
Guangliang
=========

________________________________
From: Christopher Hawker <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, 7 August 2024 1:33 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: [sig-policy] Re: prop-161-v001: Using IPv6 for Internet of Things 
(IoT) -- correct version


Hello Guangling,

IP addresses are designed to facilitate the routing of data between two 
devices, not to identify an specific packet of medication (or book, or even a 
box of cereal). Working on the theory that the pharmaceutical company announced 
a /32 from their AS to their upstream providers, and someone accessed an 
address that was assigned to a box of medication, naturally traffic would not 
get to that box of medication. As David Conrad pointed out, there are a myriad 
of other identification schemes available for this purpose. This also does not 
address the issue of what happens to the IP address that is assigned to the 
item once it has been consumed or discarded. I do not see any benefits at all 
to using IPv6 address space to identify non-electronic items.

As you've identified, an IoT device only requires a single address, being a 
/128 address. In a /48 assignment (as opposed to an allocation which is 
intended for further delegation to downstream customers), the number of 
available IPv6 addresses in a /48 is 2^80 (or 25 digits long). If the idea was 
to gain concensus, a /32 would be way too big and even though a /48 would still 
be way too big, it is the smallest assignment that can be made under current 
policy.

While I do support the usage of IPv6 address space for IoT device connectivity, 
I cannot support its use to identify devices that cannot and never will be 
connected to the internet.

Regards,
Christopher Hawker
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