nanog mailing list archives

Finger pointing [was: Yahoo and IPv6]


From: "Patrick W. Gilmore" <patrick () ianai net>
Date: Mon, 9 May 2011 16:40:03 -0400

On May 9, 2011, at 4:26 PM, Jeff Wheeler wrote:
On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 3:58 PM, Doug Barton <dougb () dougbarton us> wrote:
I do agree with you that pointing fingers at this stage is really not
helpful. I continue to maintain that being supportive of those content
networks that are willing to wade in is the right answer.

[...]

This problem is, and always has been, on the access side.  Point your
fingers that way.

While I agree with Jeff, I agree with Doug more.  Unfortunately, finger-pointing will not fix the problem.  We have 
identified many of the problems, and hopefully June 8 will shine a very bright light on any that are left.  Let's work 
on fixing the problems, and let the historians figure out whose "fault" it was.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick

P.S. As an aside, and since the finger was pointed in my general direction, I'd just like to say chicken and egg 
problems always suck.  However, when the largest sites on the 'Net have enabled v6, yet are forced to whitelist or lose 
millions of dollars because the other end is broken, I don't see how any rational person can seriously call this the 
"content mafia's" fault.



On May 9, 2011, at 4:26 PM, Jeff Wheeler wrote:

On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 3:58 PM, Doug Barton <dougb () dougbarton us> wrote:
I do agree with you that pointing fingers at this stage is really not
helpful. I continue to maintain that being supportive of those content
networks that are willing to wade in is the right answer.

Frankly, I think the finger is simply pointing in the wrong direction.
I have zero choices for native IPv6 at home, and I'm sure that is
true for the majority of us.  SOHO CPE support barely exists because
access networks haven't been asking for it.  Call centers are
certainly not equipped to evaluate "traceroute tickets" or assist
users in any practical way, which is why we see "disable IPv6 and try
again" as the cookie-cutter answer to any problem when the end-user
has IPv6.

The expectation that content providers should rush to publish AAAA
records by default (instead of white-listing, etc.) at a time when
even motivated end-users can't get IPv6 without resorting to tunnels
is ridiculous.  Let's be glad that these content providers have done
all the necessary prep work, such as deploying appropriate network
infrastructure and updating their software, so that they can choose to
send AAAA responses when they want to.

This problem is, and always has been, on the access side.  Point your
fingers that way.

-- 
Jeff S Wheeler <jsw () inconcepts biz>
Sr Network Operator  /  Innovative Network Concepts




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