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Re: Addressing plan exercise for our IPv6 course


From: Leo Vegoda <leo.vegoda () icann org>
Date: Thu, 29 Jul 2010 10:08:33 -0700

On 29 Jul 2010, at 8:00, Matthew Walster wrote:

On 29 July 2010 15:49, Owen DeLong <owen () delong com> wrote:
If we give every household on the planet a /48 (approximately 3 billion
/48s), we consume less than 1/8192 of 2000::/3.

There are 65,536 /48s in a /32. It's not about how available 2000::/3
is, it's hassle to keep requesting additional PA space. Some ISPs
literally have millions of customers.

Why would you initially request and receive a /32 if you know that you'll need far more space to assign subnets to all 
your customers?

All I'm saying is, why waste the space when they're only going to need
1 subnet? If they want more than one subnet, give them a /48,/56,/60
or whatever, as requested.

There's a good chance that you want to keep your customers for the long haul. There's a good chance that in the long 
run multi-subnet home networks will become the norm.

Leo



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