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The EU did have a mandate for government services to use IPv6, but the programme it was part of got replaced by another that didn't include IPv6. The European Commission did advocate for IPv6 use, but, the EU being the EU, motivated their recommendation by complaining that law enforcement had issues tracking down people behind CGNAT, and made clear that they wanted every IP address to point to a specific person for law enforcement reasons. So, yeah, I don't think we should let the EU deal with the specifics of network infrastructure just yet. I think it's hard to make an economic argument for IPv6. Yes, it's obviously a superior technology, but ISPs can CGNAT for cheap, consumers can still access every server, and the €40 per year a business needs to pay for an IPv4 address isn't exactly breaking the bank either. Perhaps the EU should force the issue, but I think countries like Lithuania ,where there is practically no IPv6 available (0.58%, according to https://stats.labs.apnic.net/ipv6-zoom, but who knows how accurate that is), will protest any mandate that will force their ISPs to buy new networking equipment. |
Not really that cheap. While CPAEX is CAPEX, OPEX is still a thing and operating CGNAT requires efforts. Also some (most?) CGNAT implementations are buggy and is not a good user experience, even for users who don't understand the concept of IP at all.