Doug Barton wrote:
On 7/15/15 10:24 AM, Joe Maimon wrote:
I suspect a 16 /8 right about now would be very welcome for everybody
other then the ipv6 adherents.
Globally we were burning through about a /8 every month or two in "the
good old days." So in the best case scenario we'd get 32 more months of
easy to get IPv4, but at an overwhelming cost to re-implement every
network stack.
This option was considered back in the early 2000's when I was still
involved in the discussion, and rejected as impractical.
Removing experimental status does not equate with the burden of making
it equivalent use to the rest of the address space.
How about the ARIN burn rate post IANA runout? How long does 16 /8 last
then?
What would be wrong with removing experimental status and allowing one
of the /8 to be used for low barrier to /16 assignment to any party
demonstrating a willingness to coax usability of the space?
Yes, any such effort has to run the gauntlet of IETF/IANA/RIR policy.
CGN /10 managed. This could too, if all the naysayers would just step
out of the way.