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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Atlanta, GA | Posted: February 20, 2019
The original system for doling out addresses on the internet, long believed destined for replacement amid an explosion in demand, is now likely to survive indefinitely alongside a newer, more capable standard, according to a major new study published Feb 20, 2019, by the Georgia Institute of Technology’s Internet Governance Project.
The original protocol, called IPv4, is almost 40 years old, and its 32-bit address space is too small for the global internet. A newer protocol, IPv6, has a much larger 128-bit address space, but is not backward compatible with the existing internet. For 20 years, the technical community has been trying to migrate the entire internet to the new standard, with only limited success.
While many promoters of IPv6 believe a complete transition to the new protocol is inevitable and necessary, the IGP report finds that smaller and more budget-constrained networks can let bigger and richer networks convert to the new standard and still have access to the same Internet. Instead of converging on IPv6, a variety of conversion technologies and more efficient use of IPv4 addresses through use of address-remapping techniques will support a “mixed world” of the two standards for the foreseeable future, IGP researchers found.
“The co-existence of these dual standards may actually facilitate continued internet growth, but it will make global networking more complicated. We need to stop assuming that IPv6 will eventually take over and begin to think about the implications of a mixed world,” said Brenden Kuerbis, a postdoctoral fellow at the IGP who co-authored the study with Milton Mueller, director of the IGP and a professor in the School of Public Policy. The school is a unit of the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts.
The study, “The Hidden Standards War: Economic Factors Affecting IPv6 Deployment,” was supported in part by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)’s Office of the Chief Technology Officer.
The research offers a clear-eyed, economically-grounded study of IPv6’s progress and prospects. By examining the associated network effects, developing the economic parameters for transition, and modeling the underlying economic forces which impact network operator decisions, the study paints a more complex, nuanced picture of the future of the two protocols and reaches several important conclusions.
The good news for IPv6 is:
But there is also bad news for IPv6:
The study examined the impact of IPv4 address markets and address scarcity on the transition. The authors point out that cloud service providers, who need to serve networks using both protocols, are the buyers of the largest amount of IPv4 numbers.
The IGP is comprised of professors, postdoctoral researchers, and students hosted at the School of Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology, one of the world’s leading engineering universities. IGP conducts scholarly research and produces timely policy analyses and public commentary on current events in internet governance. IGP and its partners also educate professionals and young people about internet governance around the world.