> From: Roger Jorgensen <rogerj@xxxxxxxxx> > Sorry Noel but I choice to reply public to this one. Ah, no, actually. Had you thought about it for a moment or two, you could have realized that you could have made your point just as well without publicly quoting my private email. But why am I not surprised? > It all boils down to RFC1918 space, there are 3 huge network blocks > there ... I can't really see what difference another /10 will make > really, especially now that we're in essence out of IPv4 addresses. The issue is not whether it _can_ be made to work (in Milo's famous phrase, 'with enough thrust, anything will fly'). The issue is all about costs and benefits. Speaking of the costs, if we assign a block of size N, it's not as if N people are not going to be able to get on the network as a result. To the contrary, N*M people are going to be able to get on the network as a result. Of course, the N would have had globally visible addresses, whereas the N*M will not, but that dropoff in functionality does not seem to bother most people: pretty much every wireless hub I've ever seen is also a NAT box. (I'm not even sure if there's even a way to turn off the NAT functionality in the one in our house - I don't recall one.) Given that most people are happy to take the choice 'limited access is preferable to no access' in the wireless case, I see no reason to doubt that they would, were they able to explicitly make the choice, make the same choice here. Allowing more people access to the Internet is a problem... how? Noel _______________________________________________ Ietf mailing list Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf