Sergey Gotsulyak wrote:
For this project we?ll need an easy to remember IP-address, for example like the one for Google Public DNS service (8.8.8.8)
I'm afraid you typed wrong characters for "we'll", which is a problem, among many, of unicode Anyway, 4 byte addresses of IPv4 is not so bad to memorize. You are right, however, that IPv6 addresses are impossible to remember not only for end users but also for network operators, which is one of a reason why IPv6 is NOT deployable. The magic number for memory is 7. That is, one can easily remember 4 bytes and may be able to remember 8 bytes. However, it is virtually impossible to remember 16 bytes. That is, for fairness, IPv6 is unusable. Instead, everyone should be able to remember 4 byte IPv4 addresses and 2 byte short port numbers as was documented in <draft-ohta-e2e-nat-00.txt> When an ISP operate a NAT gateway, the ISP should, for fairness between customers, reserve some well know port numbers and assign small port numbers evenly to all the customers.
We have contacted RIPE NCC with a request to get a block of addresses 2.2.2.0/24, but were told that the standard procedure does not allow us to choose an address range.
Is it possible to modify current Address Policy?
You had better to abandone IPv6 and IPv6 address policies and just stick to IPv4 with A+P including, but not limited to, <draft-ohta-e2e-nat-00.txt>. Masataka Ohta