>> It would probably cost be far more money to roll out this separate DNS >> server view, have folks monitor it and troubleshoot it, test >> and certify it in the lab, etc. than just calling and fixing >> the "broken" users. > > There is a way for the ISP to detect IPv6-broken users? (Who can > then be called and convinced to fix whatever is broken.)
Sounds as if there may be*, but I think that all depends upon what "broken" means. I'd love to have some discussion on that topic, so we can see if people are all on the same page. Igor - How do you define broken? And what technical issues do you believe underlie this condition? * I am assuming there is and that an ISP could as readily host the web page with the detection logic as Yahoo or Google could. As well, if we could make this widely available then presumably regulators could put it on their sites, SDOs could, news sites could, etc., and there could be a general awareness and detection campaign organized. I suspect there may well be other methods to detect the condition, which is why I think we should ensure there is clear agreement and understanding of the underlying condition so we can then find our way to detection. Jason _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop