On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 2:34 PM, Sascha Luck [ml] <apwg@c4inet.net> wrote:
On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 01:28:39PM +0200, Jan Ingvoldstad wrote:
Apparently, my point was not very reader friendly, so I'll try again:
Routing-wise, someone with 64 billion billion billion addresses, have about
16 billion billion ways to route the entire IPv4 internet, within the
address space constraints of a /32 allocation.

In theory, yes. But the policy currently contradicts itself to an
extent.

Section 3.8 of ripe-641 clearly states: "In IPv6 address policy,
the goal of aggregation is considered to be the most important."
ss3.4 and 3.5 bear that out also.

Yet, s5.1.2 seems to exclude aggregation as a valid reason for an
allocation. The Proposal merely attempts to remove this
contradiction.

Well, yes, that's why I first wrote "This change makes sense … I support it".
--
Jan