Date:23/01/2010 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2010/01/23/stories/2010012360812600.htm 
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Link: Front Page
Internet running out of addresses

Roy Mathew

Vital for Internet community to shift to new addressing scheme
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Less than 10% of available IPv4 addresses remain unallocated

IPv6 provides a much larger address pool than IPv4

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THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The Internet is running out of Internet Protocol (IP) 
addresses, used by computers to communicate.

The Amsterdam-based Number Resource Organization (NRO), official representative 
of the five regional registries that oversee the allocation of all Internet 
number resources, announced on Tuesday that less than 10 per cent of available 
IPv4 addresses remained unallocated. (V4 IP addresses consist of four sets of 
numbers separated by colons, which serve as a unique identification for 
computers on networks.)

Critical moment

The remaining small pool of the existing IP addresses marks a critical moment 
in IPv4 address exhaustion, ultimately impacting the future network operations 
of all businesses and organisations around the globe.

NRO chairman Axel Pawlik said in an official release that it was vital for the 
Internet community to shift to a new addressing scheme using six sets of 
numbers (IPv6), and called for determined action to ensure global adoption of 
IPv6.

"Key infrastructure"

"The limited IPv4 addresses will not allow us enough resources to achieve the 
ambitions we all hold for global Internet access. The deployment of IPv6 is a 
key infrastructure development that will enable the network to support the 
billions of people and devices that connect in the coming years," Mr. Pawlik 
said.

Internet Protocol is a set of technical rules that defines how devices 
communicate over a network. Of the two versions of IP addresses, IPv6 includes 
a modern numbering system that provides a much larger address pool than IPv4. 
With so few IPv4 addresses remaining, the NRO is urging all Internet 
stakeholders, including governments, vendors, enterprises, telecoms operators, 
and end users, to take immediate action by planning for the necessary 
investments required to deploy IPv6, says the release. The NRO specifically 
asks the business sector to provide IPv6-capable services and platforms, 
including web hosting and equipment, ensuring accessibility for IPv6 users. 
Software and hardware vendors should implement IPv6 support in their products 
to guarantee that they are available at production standard when needed. 
Governments should lead the way by making their own content and services 
available over IPv6 and encouraging IPv6 deployment efforts in their countries. 
IPv6 requirements in government procurement policies are critical at this time. 
Civil society, including organisations and end users, should request that all 
services they receive from their ISPs and vendors are IPv6-ready, to build 
demand and ensure competitive availability of IPv6 services in coming years.

Positive results

The NRO, alongside each regional registry, has actively promoted IPv6 
deployment for several years through grass-roots outreach, speaking 
engagements, conferences and media outreach. To date, their combined efforts 
have yielded positive results in the call to action for the adoption of IPv6.

"Many decision makers don't realise how many devices require IP addresses - 
mobile phones, laptops, servers, routers, the list goes on," said NRO secretary 
Raul Echeberria. "The number of available IPv4 addresses is shrinking rapidly, 
and if the global Internet community fails to recognise this, it will face 
grave consequences in the very near future. As such, the NRO is working to 
educate everyone, from network operators to top executives and government 
representatives, about the importance of IPv6 adoption."

IP addresses are allocated by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), a 
contract operated by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers 
(ICANN). IANA distributes IP addresses to regional registries, which, in turn, 
issue them to users in their regions.




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