[arin-discuss] Encouraging IPv6 Transition (From PPML)
James Cornick - JCHost.net
james.cornick at jchost.net
Mon May 14 18:33:00 EDT 2012
Until more residential ISPs adopt and deploy supported hardware it's not going to have enough market influence to move the translation in a substantial way. I'm sure this has been noted before but figured I'd reiterate. That being said the waiver is good but only natural market forces will really drive it home.
James
Sent from my iPhone
On May 14, 2012, at 5:23 PM, Chris Grundemann <cgrundemann at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Mon, May 14, 2012 at 4:07 PM, Owen DeLong <owen at delong.com> wrote:
>> I would oppose this unless you're also willing to waive IPv6 assignment fees that do not accompany an IPv4 resource application. I see no benefit to the community from requiring people to consume extra IPv4 just to get a free IPv6 assignment. (Well, actually, I do see a small benefit in exhausting IPv4 and getting on with transition faster, but, I don't think it's necessarily good stewardship).
>
> You're right Owen, I was over-simplifying. My fear is that a total fee
> waiver may hurt ARIN financially. Even free initial-assignments may
> cause harm.
>
> I don't have ARINs budget at my fingertips, perhaps a staffer can let
> us know how much it might cost to make initial IPv6 assignments (to
> end-users) free for a year and then half price for a year.
>
> That would do two things: First, it lowers a potential barrier, pure
> cost of assignment. Second, it puts a touch of urgency on initial IPv6
> requests: "Hey boss, we have to at least get our assignment this year
> if we don't want to be forced to pay later..."
>
> ~Chris
>
>> Owen
>>
>>
>> Sent from my iPad
>>
>> On May 14, 2012, at 3:03 PM, Scott Leibrand <scottleibrand at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> IMO 1A and 2A might usefully go together as a carrot + stick approach. A little extra attestation work in exchange for a "get v6 free with your v4" offer should encourage v6 adoption without increasing the overall time+cost burden on the orgs applying for space.
>>>
>>> Scott
>>>
>>> On May 14, 2012, at 10:53 AM, Chris Grundemann <cgrundemann at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Four ideas to promote IPv6 deployment, for your consideration and discussion:
>>>>
>>>> 1) Make it as easy as possible for an org who actually wants IPv6 to
>>>> get it. This is mostly in place today (allocation fee waivers, one
>>>> maint. fee per Org ID, ease of qualification, etc.) but there is still
>>>> some possible room for improvement:
>>>> 1A) Waive IPv6 assignment fees for end-users who request both IPv4
>>>> and IPv6 simultaneously.
>>>> 1B) Move the </40 small/x-small threshold to <=/48.
>>>>
>>>> 2) Provide additional motivation for orgs to request and deploy IPv6.
>>>> There are several top of mind methods to accomplish this:
>>>> 2A) Require the officer attestation to acknowledge the current
>>>> state of affairs regarding IPv4 exhaustion and IPv6 requirements.
>>>> 2B) Continue or even ramp up (especially targeting end users) ARINs
>>>> outreach efforts (which have been substantial in previous years but
>>>> are being wound down post IANA-exhaustion).
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> ~Chris
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> @ChrisGrundemann
>>>> http://chrisgrundemann.com
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>
>
>
> --
> @ChrisGrundemann
> http://chrisgrundemann.com
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