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by ephaeton
114 days ago
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having less addresses than humans is a feature that gets broken by IPv6. IMO, there ought to be less globally valid IPv4 addresses (say, a kilo less or so, maybe even a mega. We probably could even do with a giga less if you're willing to do continent/major compass routing first). IPv6 is a bit of a surveillance backbone. First you need an ID space that is big enough to give everybody a (or many) unique tags. The rest follows. If identity clashes are too costly, the identifier ceases being a useful tracking tool. If your network is based on an ID space that can satisfy your tracking needs already, how nice is that? In the past thirty years, I have not encountered a use-case where I thought, Oh, I wish I had one (or a million, billion, or whatever) IPv6 addresses available here! But then again, I haven't developed software for bad actors. |
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> In the past thirty years, I have not encountered a use-case where...
For me, the two things IPv6 does that I care about are
1) I get at least one globally-routable IP address for every machine on my LAN that I wish to have one.
2) I get multiple globally-routable subnets so that I can have networks on my LAN that are isolated from all other LAN networks, but are still able to have globally-routable addresses.
To make #2 work, you do need networking gear that's slightly better than bottom-of-the-barrel so that you can set up VLANs. If network gear vendors cared, they could pretty easily make those sorts of features standard in even bottom-of-the-barrel gear, but they do not, so they are not.