>Parts of the challenge here is that turning on IPv6 (publishing a AAAA) >can also cause brokenness for users that have no IPv6 connectivity, e.g., >those relying on broken 6to4 relays. This has been documented all over >the place, for example here: ><http://ripe61.ripe.net/presentations/162-ripe61.pdf> > >So even if there are very few IPv6 eyeballs, this event can serve to >flush out that flavor of brokenness. As I understand it, part of the >idea of everyone moving together is to get people to see the brokenness >across multiple sites, thus to blame the network not the content >provider, thus to pressure the networks to fix things. Richard is exactly right on where a lot of value is. This is an opportunity to find and fix the ~0.05% level of brokenness. Even "non-participating" ISPs will need to take steps to prepare, and this is of course a great forcing function within companies to ask what their IPv6 plans and to begin/continue IPv6 technical training, etc. Jason _______________________________________________ Ietf mailing list Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf