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by jacquesm 1133 days ago
Fair enough, but that more or less emphasizes my point: if it wasn't done by 2010 or so that means that a ton of IoT hardware has now shipped that may never see updates and that would possibly end up failing when presented with such a departure from what the expected behavior was at the time the hardware was shipped. You change old established standards at your peril, especially how IPV4 is routed and which ranges are reserved. There are quite a few things that retrospectively could have been handled better and a large number of huge ranges got handed out like candy back in the day. Some of those have been reclaimed and some still remain. It may be easier and with less chance of breaking stuff if those ranges were reclaimed more aggressively.
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It would be amusing if a moderately breaking change to IPv4 is what finally causes all the old equipment to be finally dumpstered and IPv6 to reign supreme.
Indeed, that would be amusing. But I'm a big fan of getting as much life as possible out of hardware and seeing a whole pile of things unnecessarily dumped is a big ecological impact and that needs to be weighed against the advantages. And it will be hard to judge the impact without actually doing it.