On Fri, 14 Apr 2006 15:53:03 -0400, Edward Lewis <Ed.Lewis@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > It's hardly an engineering decision. The sense was that without PI > space, IPv6 will remain in a state that will not get it deployment > experience. > This is a very important point. Without expressing an opinion on the proposal itself, I'll note that this answers one very important question: why should an organization deploy v6? The ability to secure PI space is a very powerful answer for some companies. (Some people will say "and that's why they use NAT today. True -- but companies who use 1918 space and NAT get into trouble when they create private interconnects to other such companies -- or, worse yet, to a group of other such companies that are working together on something. Now, if they could qualify the locally-unique address with a site prefix it would be easier, but that's more or less 8+8 which is what IPv6 addressing should have been from the beginning... I digress -- that issue was hotly debated when IPv6 was being created, and though some of us were strongly in favor of it others were strongly opposed. There was simply no consensus to do the right thing. Hmm, my biases are showing...) --Steven M. Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf