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[rpd] Policy areas to consider
Owen DeLong
owen at delong.com
Thu Jul 2 06:12:20 UTC 2015
With all due respect, instead of debating whether or not to rearrange the deck chairs when we hit the ice berg before we leave port, perhaps it would be best to redesign the ship so that it won’t sink now that we know what is coming.
For those having trouble following the analogy…
IPv4 is like the Titanic. It’s going to go down, just a matter of when.
Free Pool runout is one of the icebergs that can take IPv4 out.
AfriNIC has such a low burn rate and such a large free pool that we effectively
haven’t left port yet.
If we retool the ship for IPv6, it becomes impenetrable to the existing icebergs.
The AfriNIC region has the unique opportunity to leapfrog the rest of the internet by making their greenfield deployments dual-stack and/or IPv6-primary. There’s more opportunity to do the initial build of the internet on IPv6 in Africa than anywhere else in the world. Instead of focusing on where, exactly, we want the deck chairs to be lined up when we hit the IPv4 iceberg, let’s just deploy IPv6 so we don’t have to care. It’s a much better use of resources.
Just my $0.02.
Owen
> On Jul 1, 2015, at 20:19 , Dr Paulos Nyirenda <paulos at sdnp.org.mw> wrote:
>
> On 1 Jul 2015 at 18:52, Seun Ojedeji <seun.ojedeji at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> With ARIN getting close to end of it's v4 addresses, it recently activated an
>> interesting policy that attempts to address requests that are beyond available IP
>> block in ARIN's pool.
>>
>> https://www.arin.net/announcements/2015/20150701.html
>>
>> - Will be good to see our region preparing for such day as well
>
> At the current uptake if IP resources in the AFRINIC region such a day is likely to be
> more than 5 to 10 years from now - which is many "Internet light years" away ! ...
> unfortunately :-)
>
>> - Will be good to see new policies emerge as a result of the emerging global
>> realities.
>
> I think we do indeed need new policies that deliberately target to speed up the IPv4
> exhaustion in the AFRINIC region - Africa - in a useful productive way that improves the
> sustainability of AFRINIC, its LIRs and end users in a profitable manner
>
> The Academic Allocation Policy draft that was rejected a few moons ago tried to do this
> but was not acceptable to the community. I do not think "reservation" will yield such
> productive and profitable sustainability while speeding up exhaustion.
>
> I know that there are a few ideas floating around that could yield that deliberate
> speeding up of the IPv4 exhaustion in AFRINIC while at the same time boosting the income
> generation for our cash strapped AFRINIC and LIRs across the region. I hope that someone
> will gather the courage to write these up into a policy and face the community with it !
>
> Regards,
>
> Paulos
> ======================
> Dr Paulos B Nyirenda
> NIC.MW & .mw ccTLD
> http://www.registrar.mw
>
>
>> Regards
>> sent from Google nexus 4
>> kindly excuse brevity and typos.
>
>
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