[ppml] IPv6 flawed?

Azinger, Marla marla.azinger at frontiercorp.com
Mon Sep 17 13:02:46 EDT 2007


1. From your response I just have to gather you are not comprhending my points.  I can understand disagreement, but from your response, it appears you are only able to see one view of things.  And I am familiar with the technical documents and have actively debated the pros and cons.  But again, you must not comprehend the fact that I am pointing out Pro's.

So just to make it clear.  I think Owen and Paul have valid points.  And I cant, nor do I say they are wrong.  What I have pointed out is that there are positive aspects that keep getting overlooked.  And there can be hope in it working if it were worked on more.  That said, I think hope is diminishing due to the strong beliefs that it will be misused.  I think that is really unfortunate because there are enterprises that could benefit from it.

2.Nowhere did I suggest ARIN take punitive measures.  If public humility was to be used, it would be exactly that.  Public.  And...I know this is not an original thought.

Cheers!
Marla  





-----Original Message-----
From: ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:ppml-bounces at arin.net]On Behalf Of
michael.dillon at bt.com
Sent: Monday, September 17, 2007 9:22 AM
To: ppml at arin.net
Subject: Re: [ppml] IPv6 flawed?


>  Which makes me wonder why they arnt 
> just publicly humiliated into doing things right.  And I 
> question, if they would do the same thing with ULA or 
> actually use that one right with all the publicity its gotten.

As an ARIN AC member, I would have thought that you would take the time
to understand the technology that you were talking about, ESPECIALLY
when you talk about applying punitive measures.

Let me reword this. It is JUST PLAIN STUPID to suggest that we should
publicly humiliate people who use ULA addressing. ULA was created by the
IETF to address the need for addressing private interfaces which are
never intended to communicate outside a particular network. There is
nothing wrong with using ULA addresses.

As for ULA-C, this is something which does not exist. There are at least
two different proposals for something which may or may not be what
people think of as ULA-C. The IETF is rechartering the ipv6 working
group and one of the work items in that charter is to resolve what to do
about ULA-C and the various proposals. It is entirely possible that the
IETF will create something called ULA-C which is not at all like what
you think it is. If you care about this, I suggest that you should join
the WG, read the drafts, comment on them, or write your own draft.

But it is premature to be promoting punitive measures on the ARIN PPML.

And for the record, I don't care what hat you were wearing when you made
that comment, I will not be voting for your re-election to the AC.

--Michael Dillon

P.S. If you are still confused about ULA then read RFC 4193
http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4193.txt

_______________________________________________
PPML
You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to the ARIN Public Policy
Mailing List (PPML at arin.net).
Unsubscribe or manage your mailing list subscription at:
http://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/ppml Please contact the ARIN Member Services
Help Desk at info at arin.net if you experience any issues.



More information about the ARIN-PPML mailing list