I was thinking about End User in a sense of one to simply consume a product or 
a service offered by a service provider. However, I should have left room for 
those that are assigned GUA space by a service provider and reassign space to 
their end users. (i.e. Allocated /48 and reassign /64 or /56)

I do agree that the infrastructure and management costs out way the costs of 
provider independent space. I agree it would be extremely difficult to setup 
some sort of fee for any prefix size in IPv6.

Then it's fair to say the approach should be simply to chalk the lose in IPv4 
revenue and move on. It's not a big concern for us. I was just curious as to 
the large providers that make extra money off those wanting more IPv4 addresses.

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Cutler James R [mailto:james.cut...@consultant.com]
Sent: Fri 8/3/2012 10:04 PM
To: Otis L. Surratt, Jr.
Cc: NANOG list
Subject: Re: IPv6 End User Fee
 
I would say that the typical usage, at least here in the US, is that an End 
User is the one holding an iPhone or sitting at a computer watching the 
Olympics, and, ultimately, paying that last mile fee.

Even using your definition, the costs of connectivity (routers, wires, 
management) far exceeds the cost of addressing.  Given the quantity of numbers 
available for IP addressing, it is does not make economic sense to even 
construct a billing mechanism for IPv6 addressing beyond those of the LIRs, 
RIRs, etc. Purchase IPv6 connectivity includes the assumption of IPv6 
addressing included.

On Aug 3, 2012, at 7:32 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr." <o...@ocosa.com> wrote:
> By end user I mean hosting clients (cloud, collocation, shared, dedicated, 
> VPS, etc.) of any sort. For example you have clients that would need....say 
> /24 for their dedicated server. If you charge a $1.00/IP which is typical 
> then you would lose that revenue if they converted to IPv6. If you didn't 
> charge for IPv4 then you have nothing to to lose.
>  
> Otis
> 
> From: Cutler James R [mailto:james.cut...@consultant.com]
> Sent: Fri 8/3/2012 3:48 PM
> To: Otis L. Surratt, Jr.
> Cc: NANOG list
> Subject: Re: IPv6 End User Fee
> 
> On Aug 3, 2012, at 3:22 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr." <o...@ocosa.com> wrote:
> > Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
> >
> > <snip/>
> > Otis
> >
> 
> I can't imagine that this would be anything but counterproductive.  End users 
> are not interested in IPv6 - most would not recognize IPv6 if it fell out of 
> their screen.  End users want working connectivity, not jargon. 
> 
> James R. Cutler
> james.cut...@consultant.com
> 
> 



Reply via email to