On Sep 26, 2011, at 2:15 PM, George, Wes wrote:

> From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Keith 
> Moore
> Sent: Friday, September 23, 2011 10:04 PM
>  
> The problem is in the zillions of systems in the field that have assumptions 
> about 240/4 wired into them, most of which either have no automatic upgrade 
> mechanism, aren't set up to use it, or aren't being maintained.  
> <snip>
> Honestly I'd guess that if vendors started changing their code today, it 
> would be 10 years before 240/4 could be widely used in the field.
>  
>  
> WEG] See that’s the point, I think we keep looking at this from a “boil the 
> ocean” perspective. The question is not, “could we use 240/4 as more global 
> unicast space?” as the ship sailed on that years ago when IETF apparently 
> decided it was too hard to change and nothing should be done.
> The question is, “if the space were unreserved, are there valid use cases 
> where networks within a given administrative control might be able to make 
> use of it?”

maybe.  But I personally don't believe that such addresses won't leak out. 

I'd say if a network operator wants to make a case for it using 240/4, it can 
write up an Internet-Draft detailing how it would be used along with 
containment measures, and petition IETF to ask IANA to permit such use.

The last thing that's needed is to open up that space for general use for 
anybody who thinks it's a good idea.  And I sympathize with the notion that any 
use of the precious remaining reserved v4 space should somehow credibly promote 
IPv6 adoption.

Keith

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