[arin-ppml] Sensible IPv6 Allocation Policies - Rev 0.8 (PP 121)

Randy Carpenter rcarpen at network1.net
Thu Nov 18 14:49:02 EST 2010


I also very strongly support this.

-Randy

--
| Randy Carpenter
| Vice President, IT Services
| Red Hat Certified Engineer
| First Network Group, Inc.
| (419)739-9240, x1
----

----- Original Message -----
> I strongly support.
> >
> > The ARIN Advisory Council (AC) will review the proposal at their
> > next
> > regularly scheduled meeting (if the period before the next regularly
> > scheduled meeting is less than 10 days, then the period may be
> > extended
> > to the subsequent regularly scheduled meeting). The AC will decide
> > how
> > to utilize the proposal and announce the decision to the PPML.
> >
> > The AC invites everyone to comment on the proposal on the PPML,
> > particularly their support or non-support and the reasoning
> > behind their opinion. Such participation contributes to a thorough
> > vetting and provides important guidance to the AC in their
> > deliberations.
> >
> 
> While a /32 at first glance looked like way more addresses than we
> needed,
> when I started engineering the network into my locations it quickly
> became clear that /48 was out for all but my largest business
> customers. /56 or /60's are all I could manage for SOHO and
> residential
> customers
> and still have a reasonably manageable network.
> 
> >>    8. Rationale:
> >
> >> The current ISP policy for IPv6 allocations is both short-sighted
> >> and
> >> insufficient for rational deployments by most ISPs. We have gained
> >> significant operational experience with IPv6 in the time since it
> >> was
> >> written and it is clear that current policy is driving many ISPs to
> >> choices of excess conservatism that will eventually harm innovation
> >> in
> >> the consumer space.
> 
> Larry Ash
> Network Administrator
> Mountain West Telephone
> 123 W 1st St.
> Casper, WY 82601
> Office 307 233-8387
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