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Mich Kabay takes a high-level view of security issues and provides resources to help safeguard your corporate and personal security.
In the current series of articles, I’m reviewing some of the papers presented at the 2008 Workshop on the Economics of Information Security (WEIS 2008) at Dartmouth College in June.
Hillary Elmore, L. Jean Camp and Brandon Stephens presented a paper entitled “Diffusion and Adoption of IPv6 in the ARIN Region.” The authors point out that the absolute limit of unique 32-bit IPv4 addresses, is about 4 billion. The 128-bit IPv6 has an address space of approximately 10^38, which is incomprehensibly larger.
[A quick note to encourage the lost art of order-of-magnitude mental arithmetic: I teach my students to estimate powers of 2 (if they haven’t memorized them) using the elementary observation that since (x^a)^b = x^(a*b) and 2 is approximately equal to 10^0.30103, then any power of 2 can be estimated as follows: 2^b is approximately equal to 10^(0.30103*b). Thus, 2^32 is approximately 10^9.6, or roughly 4 x 10^9 (because if the logarithm base 10 of 2 is 0.30103 then the log of 4 is 0.60206 and the log of 8 is 0.90309). So endeth the first lesson.]
For a detailed analysis of the security and economic benefits of IPv6, see the home page for the IPv6 Task Force Inquiry (completed 2006) funded by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). There are links there to the final report in HTML and in PDF and also to supporting materials.
Elmore, Camp and Stephens make the point that the adoption of IPv6 addressing has been surprisingly slow. They ask why. The authors provide a thoughtful analysis of available data sets and conclude that, at current rates of adoption, there is no way that IPv6 will replace IPv4 utilization before all IPv4 addresses are used (estimated to be around 2011).
Because of uncertainty resulting from choices of data and variability in those data, the estimates for 80% implementation of IPv4 in the North American region (“ARIN”) is somewhere between 8 and 22 years (i.e., 2016 through 2030). If there is no practical way to assign new IP addresses, new Internet players will be shut out of the market. They write:
"Given the current expenditures on IPv4 in the United States and the investment cost necessary to switch from IPv4 to IPv6, this may not be the best option for the U.S. and other developed countries with existing IPv4 infrastructure…
M. E. Kabay, PhD, CISSP-ISSMP, specializes in security and operations management consulting services. CV online.
Comments (6)
IPV6 will ramp up sharply over the next three yearsBy TMLutas on December 7, 2008, 5:17 pmThe US military buys an awful lot of bandwidth worldwide. They will be kicking out all ISPs from military bandwidth contracts if they do not offer IPV6. The different...
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Finally a brain among the responsesBy Paul on September 15, 2008, 12:11 pmCan't agree more. ROI? No driver for this convertion? It's not deployment time yet? If their's no $ in it don't do it? Their is $ in it if you want your...
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I agree.By Anon on September 11, 2008, 11:24 amThis is a seemingly sound idea.
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IPv6By Fitz Hough on August 8, 2008, 12:47 amIf we used the conversion process model now in use for IPv6, we would still sitting around watching 10" Black and White screens on our home TVs. Demand for essential...
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Application of the diffusion model is prematureBy jcurran on August 7, 2008, 4:58 pmThe driver for deployment of IPv6 hasn't started yet; there really is no pressing driver for most enterprises to deploy until such time as IPv4 depletion has occurred....
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