Hi Tom,
On 22 Sep 2017, at 15:37, Tom Hill <tom.hill@bytemark.co.uk> wrote:
Because I don't see a way in which this policy will change anyone's
behaviour, or incentivise them differently over the current policy, I
don't believe it needs to be changed. If you would like, we can take
IPv6 adoption out of the argument completely, and I can still be solely
against it for the reason of changing the status quo on acceptable
prefix sizes for no perceivable gain to anyone.
The proposal doesn't have a goal of changing anyone's behaviour or incentivising anyone. The goal is to quadruple the number of remaining IPv4 applications that RIPE NCC can fulfil.
So the gain is to those three quarters of applications that would otherwise be unsuccessful.
I'd gently suggest the counter:
- that new entrants are most likely to support IPv6 (because very little IPv4 can be got);
- that even fully IPv6-ed new entrants need some IPv4 to make IPv6 work;
- reaching IPv4 runout while this is still the case will hurt those new entrants disproportionately;