On Thu, Oct 11, 2001 at 09:16:41AM +0100, Peter Galbavy wrote: Hi Peter,
Trying to solve the problem of people not trusting ISPs by changing the technology to ensure that people *must* trust one ISP (IPv6 IMHO is just such a technology) is not a very customer friendly attitude. It does not work and will not work.
Not that I know anything, but in my opinion, you are inaccurate in two respects here. Firstly, IPv6 *technology* is not the issue. You can do everything that you could do in IPv4 with IPv6, and this includes the current methodology for multihoming. It also introduces another way of multihoming, which is akin to taking PA space from multiple upstreams and initiating/receiving connections according to some well defined algorithms. I don't think there is any case to be made that the technology forces a user to trust one ISP. Secondly, however, it has been in my limited experience IPv6 *policy* which has been perhaps more restrictive, inflexible and badly defined than necessary, and in particular address allocation policy. Thankfully this is well on the way to being changed, particularly after the developments of the last RIPE meeting. If you are interested, you should contribute; that way we all benefit from your insights. Niall -- Enigma Consulting Limited: Security, UNIX and telecommunications consultants. Address: Floor 2, 45 Dawson Street, Dublin 2, Ireland. http://www.enigma.ie/