nanog mailing list archives
Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters
From: Fred Baker <fred () cisco com>
Date: Fri, 4 Feb 2011 19:08:03 +0000
On Feb 4, 2011, at 6:47 PM, Heinrich Strauss wrote:
So once the "early" adopters migrate their networks to IPv6, there is no business need to maintain the IPv4 allocation and that will be returned to the free pool, since Business would see it as an unnecessary cost.
Interesting reasoning. I would think that until we have pretty wide IPv4 implementation, the business need to keep the allocation is to talk with the people who have not yet implemented it. From a Reductio ad Absurdum perspective, imagine that facebook or youtube, now that they have implemented IPv6, felt obliged to give up their IPv4 allocation immediately? It would mean that they were out of business, which I should think might be an excellent business reason to not deploy IPv6.
Current thread:
- Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Heinrich Strauss (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Fred Baker (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Benson Schliesser (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Bill Woodcock (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Daniel Seagraves (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Patrick W. Gilmore (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Jared Mauch (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Patrick W. Gilmore (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Daniel Seagraves (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Jimmy Hess (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Jay Ashworth (Feb 04)
- RE: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Lee Howard (Feb 06)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Daniel Seagraves (Feb 04)
- Re: Post-Exhaustion-phase "punishment" for early adopters Fred Baker (Feb 04)