George, Wesley wrote: > > > It's time to remove the stabilisers on the IPv6 bicycle. > > This takes nothing away. It's not as if the day that this draft gets > published as an RFC, 6to4 stops working. In my personal perception, the "historic" status used to be a technical characterization to indicate that (1) a protocol or technology has been fully replaced by some newer protocol and there is no reason to continue using the original technology anymore because the successor can be used in each of the original usage scenarios today (2) the protocol/technology has been largely put out of use, and its active use has dropped to marginal levels (like less than 1% of the original active use) Personally, I have never conciously used anything related to IPv6 so far, so for me it is difficult to comment, but what has been said looks to me that neither (1) nor (2) apply to 6to4. The user base seems to have always been small, and most of the users of 6to4 simply did _not_ have an alternative -- and its current users still do _not_ have an alternative today. Classification of 6to4 as historic is appropriate use of the IETF process, because it would be a political, but not an accurate technical statement. -Martin _______________________________________________ Ietf mailing list Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf