Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-06 Thread Dan Luedtke
On Fri, 2012-08-03 at 14:22 -0500, Otis L. Surratt, Jr. wrote:
> 1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?
By using legacy IP only were it is necessary. This way I have to support
only one stack (IPv6), that saves me money.

Regards.

Dan
-- 
Dan Luedtke
http://www.danrl.de




Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-05 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Sun, Aug 05, 2012 at 04:00:18PM -, John Levine wrote:
> >Do you see problems with this scheme? There's considerable
> >interest and momentum in end user owned routing infrastructure,
> >including wireless ad hoc meshes across urban areas.
> 
> I've seen remarkably little overlap between the people that think ad
> hoc meshes are a fabulous liberating technology and the people who
> understand how they work and what their limitatations are.

Absolutely accurate observation.
 
> As a way to bring some sort of service to unserved areas, they're
> interesting.  As a substitute for a real network, they're not.

By its nature, the wireless ad hoc are at best good for more or
less understandable audio calls in a tight codec or text message 
(or email) delivery. Even so, in current systems the scaling is 
limited by admin traffic chatter.

The interesting part is how well would the newer protocols work
if the wireless links were substituted by reliable >1 GBit/s
connections.



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-05 Thread John Levine
>Do you see problems with this scheme? There's considerable
>interest and momentum in end user owned routing infrastructure,
>including wireless ad hoc meshes across urban areas.

I've seen remarkably little overlap between the people that think ad
hoc meshes are a fabulous liberating technology and the people who
understand how they work and what their limitatations are.

As a way to bring some sort of service to unserved areas, they're
interesting.  As a substitute for a real network, they're not.

R's,
John



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-05 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Sat, Aug 04, 2012 at 06:53:48PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:

> This ignores the many many studies of the idea of geo-based
> addressing which have proven its unfeasibility as well as the

I disagree that the studies have looked at the problem
space from the right angle. 

> fact that not everyone wants their address to reflect the exact
> coordinates of where the box is located.

Routing efficiency and anonymity are mutually exclusive.

Apart from geoip databases triangulation via time of
flight will nail you down in space in any case.

Anonymization should be a function of an extra layer,
just as Tor and I2P etc. are doing it for TCP/IP.
 
> Also, any such scheme would depend on defining an arbitrary
> "minimum" sized box and ignores the possibility of needing
> many addresses for the same physical box containing multiple
> virtual nodes.

You cannot have two physical switches occupying the
same space. 128 bits is quite enough to physically
address each cubic micron in 1/3rd of Earth volume.
 
> It sounds great in theory until you actually compare it to the
> real world.
> 
> IP addresses are not physical addresses and trying to

/64 is enough to abuse parts of IPv6 to encode physical
coordinates.

> correlate them only leads to artificial limitations and other
> problems.

Interesting. I see the current IPv4/IPv6 model full of
artificial limitations that go away if you remove the
centralistic governance model.
 
> >>> Luckily, /64 looks like large enough to bypass that
> >>> by offering address space sufficiently large while
> >>> co-existable with legacy addressing and routing. 
> >> 
> >> Why on earth would you be messing around within /64? It should be easy 
> >> enough to get a /48 (it certainly is now).
> > 
> > It's a lowest common denominator, at least as long the 
> > ISPs are playing by the rules. If end users conspire to use
> > a new addressing scheme bypassing the ISP infrastructure
> > as the crow flies, a freely modyfiable address field
> > within your ISP-assigned address space is the best label
> > you can hope for. 
> > 
> 
> Uh, good luck with that.

Do you see problems with this scheme? There's considerable
interest and momentum in end user owned routing infrastructure,
including wireless ad hoc meshes across urban areas.
 
> >>> I hope eventually somebody will start
> >>> tinkering with mesh radios which also have GPS 
> >>> onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
> >>> 24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
> >>> a decent-resolution WGS84 position fix. Plus,
> >>> GPS gives you a pretty accurate clock.
> >> 
> >> That could be an interesting project. Limiting it to a /64 still doesn't 
> >> make a lot of sense to me.
> > 
> > I'm actually glad it's a /64. MAC space is a lot more cramped,
> > and that information doesn't travel at all far. 
> 
> 
> You misunderstand... I'm suggesting a /48 (65,536 /64s), not
> a /80 (48 bits to mess around with).

You can't have the same /48 getting routed to random end
users all over the world. But each of these users can
use the local /64 as scratch space that will be preserved
as it travels across IPv6 Internet.



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-04 Thread Owen DeLong

On Aug 4, 2012, at 12:41 , Eugen Leitl  wrote:

> On Sat, Aug 04, 2012 at 10:31:02AM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
> 
>>> IPv6 missed a great chance of doing away with all the
>>> central waterfall trickle-down space distribution.
>>> 
>> 
>> There was no need to fix what wasn't broken.
> 
> Let's say I want to plunk down a zero-administration 
> node somewhere, as an end user. The most natural
> approach is where addresses are derived from constraints,
> and address collisions are identical to physical space
> collisions. No two nodes can occupy the same space.
> By the time you're beyond these 2^24 lat/long resolution
> IPv6 is probably on its last legs anyway, and there's
> way to do renumbering with more bits, at the very least.
> 

This ignores the many many studies of the idea of geo-based
addressing which have proven its unfeasibility as well as the
fact that not everyone wants their address to reflect the exact
coordinates of where the box is located.

Also, any such scheme would depend on defining an arbitrary
"minimum" sized box and ignores the possibility of needing
many addresses for the same physical box containing multiple
virtual nodes.

It sounds great in theory until you actually compare it to the
real world.

IP addresses are not physical addresses and trying to
correlate them only leads to artificial limitations and other
problems.

>>> Luckily, /64 looks like large enough to bypass that
>>> by offering address space sufficiently large while
>>> co-existable with legacy addressing and routing. 
>> 
>> Why on earth would you be messing around within /64? It should be easy 
>> enough to get a /48 (it certainly is now).
> 
> It's a lowest common denominator, at least as long the 
> ISPs are playing by the rules. If end users conspire to use
> a new addressing scheme bypassing the ISP infrastructure
> as the crow flies, a freely modyfiable address field
> within your ISP-assigned address space is the best label
> you can hope for. 
> 

Uh, good luck with that.

>>> I hope eventually somebody will start
>>> tinkering with mesh radios which also have GPS 
>>> onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
>>> 24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
>>> a decent-resolution WGS84 position fix. Plus,
>>> GPS gives you a pretty accurate clock.
>> 
>> That could be an interesting project. Limiting it to a /64 still doesn't 
>> make a lot of sense to me.
> 
> I'm actually glad it's a /64. MAC space is a lot more cramped,
> and that information doesn't travel at all far. 


You misunderstand... I'm suggesting a /48 (65,536 /64s), not
a /80 (48 bits to mess around with).

Owen




Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-04 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Sat, Aug 04, 2012 at 10:31:02AM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:

> > IPv6 missed a great chance of doing away with all the
> > central waterfall trickle-down space distribution.
> > 
> 
> There was no need to fix what wasn't broken.

Let's say I want to plunk down a zero-administration 
node somewhere, as an end user. The most natural
approach is where addresses are derived from constraints,
and address collisions are identical to physical space
collisions. No two nodes can occupy the same space.
By the time you're beyond these 2^24 lat/long resolution
IPv6 is probably on its last legs anyway, and there's
way to do renumbering with more bits, at the very least.
 
> > Luckily, /64 looks like large enough to bypass that
> > by offering address space sufficiently large while
> > co-existable with legacy addressing and routing. 
> 
> Why on earth would you be messing around within /64? It should be easy enough 
> to get a /48 (it certainly is now).

It's a lowest common denominator, at least as long the 
ISPs are playing by the rules. If end users conspire to use
a new addressing scheme bypassing the ISP infrastructure
as the crow flies, a freely modyfiable address field
within your ISP-assigned address space is the best label
you can hope for. 
 
> > I hope eventually somebody will start
> > tinkering with mesh radios which also have GPS 
> > onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
> > 24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
> > a decent-resolution WGS84 position fix. Plus,
> > GPS gives you a pretty accurate clock.
> 
> That could be an interesting project. Limiting it to a /64 still doesn't make 
> a lot of sense to me.

I'm actually glad it's a /64. MAC space is a lot more cramped,
and that information doesn't travel at all far. 



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-04 Thread Owen DeLong

On Aug 4, 2012, at 03:01 , Eugen Leitl  wrote:

> On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 08:31:06PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
> 
>> You MIGHT have paid some other organization for the privilege of 
>> transferring part or all of their registration rights to you.
>> 
>> But in no case did you pay for the addresses themselves unless you are silly 
>> enough to think that a person can own an integer.
> 
> IPv6 missed a great chance of doing away with all the
> central waterfall trickle-down space distribution.
> 

There was no need to fix what wasn't broken.

> Luckily, /64 looks like large enough to bypass that
> by offering address space sufficiently large while
> co-existable with legacy addressing and routing. 

Why on earth would you be messing around within /64? It should be easy enough 
to get a /48 (it certainly is now).


> I hope eventually somebody will start
> tinkering with mesh radios which also have GPS 
> onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
> 24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
> a decent-resolution WGS84 position fix. Plus,
> GPS gives you a pretty accurate clock.

That could be an interesting project. Limiting it to a /64 still doesn't make a 
lot of sense to me.

Owen




Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-04 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Sat, Aug 04, 2012 at 10:59:09AM -0500, Jimmy Hess wrote:
> On 8/4/12, Eugen Leitl  wrote:
> > On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 08:31:06PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
> > onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
> > 24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
> > a decent-resolution WGS84 position fix. Plus,
> > GPS gives you a pretty accurate clock.
> 
> Yes, very interesting.  I wonder how do you achieve full scale
> software testing for a mesh networking platform efficiently?

The Serval people do physical testing in the lab and
the field. Of course, their scale is very small. You'd want 
to push most traffic through regular IPv6 Internet and 
only everything else through the mesh which doesn't
have direct line of sight or fiber connectivity.

This can be impemented as an abstract layer presenting
a unified view, which uses VPN tunnels (each router node
would not need to maintain many, even modest connectivites
would result in very few hops) over IPv6 Internet 
just as Tor or I2P do it today. The penalty would be not
that bad, given that you're not doing any deliberate
traffic remixing/onion routing.

You can prototype something like that quite easily based
on CyanogenMod with IPv6, OpenVPN or tinc, gpsd, Serval, 
(maybe cjdns https://raw.github.com/cjdelisle/cjdns/master/rfcs/Whitepaper.md
as well?) and some glue to tie it all together.
 
> Do any of the virtual machine monitors  Xen, KVM, etc
> support an emulated 802.11n/other radio device  that allows you to
> configure  "Emulated location and geography" for each virtual node,
> to test various protocols and implementations across p2p wireless
> meshes  by simulating realistic connectivity performance?

Very good point. I'm not aware of simulators which can do
that on a very large scale (millions, billions to trillions 
of nodes).



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-04 Thread Jimmy Hess
On 8/4/12, Eugen Leitl  wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 08:31:06PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:
> onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
> 24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
> a decent-resolution WGS84 position fix. Plus,
> GPS gives you a pretty accurate clock.

Yes, very interesting.  I wonder how do you achieve full scale
software testing for a mesh networking platform efficiently?

Do any of the virtual machine monitors  Xen, KVM, etc
support an emulated 802.11n/other radio device  that allows you to
configure  "Emulated location and geography" for each virtual node,
to test various protocols and implementations across p2p wireless
meshes  by simulating realistic connectivity performance?

--
-JH



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-04 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Fri, Aug 03, 2012 at 08:31:06PM -0700, Owen DeLong wrote:

> You MIGHT have paid some other organization for the privilege of transferring 
> part or all of their registration rights to you.
> 
> But in no case did you pay for the addresses themselves unless you are silly 
> enough to think that a person can own an integer.

IPv6 missed a great chance of doing away with all the
central waterfall trickle-down space distribution.

Luckily, /64 looks like large enough to bypass that
by offering address space sufficiently large while
co-existable with legacy addressing and routing. 

I hope eventually somebody will start
tinkering with mesh radios which also have GPS 
onboard (as most smartphones and tablets do).
24 + 24 + 16 bits are just enough to represent
a decent-resolution WGS84 position fix. Plus,
GPS gives you a pretty accurate clock.



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Owen DeLong

On Aug 3, 2012, at 21:05 , "Otis L. Surratt, Jr."  wrote:

> 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)

That shouldn't happen... If you are acting as an LIR, you should be getting at 
least a /32 and you should be assigning at least a /48 to your end users.

> 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.

Is it really a loss? If you're doing things right, IPv4 is costing you more and 
more and more money every year. When your IPv4 revenue goes away, so should 
your IPv4 costs.

Owen

> 
> 
> 
> -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."  wrote:
>> By end user I mean hosting clients (cloud, collocation, shared, dedicated, 
>> VPS, etc.) of any sort. For example you have clients that would needsay 
>> /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."  wrote:
>>> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 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
>> 
>> 
> 
> 




RE: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Otis L. Surratt, Jr.
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."  wrote:
> By end user I mean hosting clients (cloud, collocation, shared, dedicated, 
> VPS, etc.) of any sort. For example you have clients that would needsay 
> /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."  wrote:
> > Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
> >
> > 
> > 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
> 
> 





Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Owen DeLong

On Aug 3, 2012, at 20:22 , Randy Bush  wrote:

>> You must not charge for the addresses at all, they are not
>> yours, you can't sell them.
> 
> do i pay for them?

NO, you don't. You _MIGHT_ pay for registration services where you are paying 
for the service of having them uniquely registered in the RIR system.

You MIGHT have paid some other organization for the privilege of transferring 
part or all of their registration rights to you.

But in no case did you pay for the addresses themselves unless you are silly 
enough to think that a person can own an integer.

Owen




Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Randy Bush
> You must not charge for the addresses at all, they are not
> yours, you can't sell them.

do i pay for them?



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Cutler James R
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."  wrote:
> By end user I mean hosting clients (cloud, collocation, shared, dedicated, 
> VPS, etc.) of any sort. For example you have clients that would needsay 
> /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."  wrote:
> > Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
> >
> > 
> > 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
> 
> 




Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread JORDI PALET MARTINEZ
Add value. You must not charge for the addresses at all, they are not
yours, you can't sell them.

In every "smart" business, the future is not anymore selling "goods" but
added value.

If you have a quasi-unlimited number of addresses in every customer, you
can star building up new value added services and applications, either
in-house or with the cooperation of third-party developers, such as in the
case of the app-store and likes.

You will ger a small revenue for every new service or app, but times many
customers/month, and this will increase the demand of bw, so you will be
able to sell bigger pipes.

Regards,
Jordi






-Mensaje original-
De: "Otis L. Surratt, Jr." 
Responder a: 
Fecha: viernes 3 de agosto de 2012 12:22
Para: 
Asunto: IPv6 End User Fee

>Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>
>Just wondering, with so many IPv6 resources in a single allocation it
>would seem difficult to charge anything at all.
>
>1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?
>2. Are you charging anything?
>3. Is the cost built into the service?
>4. Do you assign IPv6 space to end user and charge admin fee?
>
>Take care,
>
>Otis 
>



**
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Are you ready for the new Internet ?
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Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Jimmy Hess
On 8/3/12, Otis L. Surratt, Jr.  wrote:
> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>
ISPs already charge for bandwidth link capacity.  Why charge a fee to
discourage subscribers from adopting a protocol that will let the ISP
sell larger capacity links?

IPv6 packet headers are 40 bytes length,   Versus  IPv4  headers which
were ~20 bytes.

--
-JH



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread William Pitcock
Hi!

On Aug 3, 2012, at 6:32 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr."  wrote:

> By end user I mean hosting clients (cloud, collocation, shared, dedicated, 
> VPS, etc.) of any sort. For example you have clients that would needsay 
> /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. 
> 

A possible revenue-recovery model would be to charge say $2 per IP for services 
below a certain resource threshold, for example 1gb vps or larger get free IPs 
and dedicated servers get free IPs.  This helps to increase margin as some 
people will upgrade to more expensive plans to get the free IPv4s.  In hosting 
you can just issue /128s on ipv6 and require upgrades to get larger allocations.

William

> 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."  wrote:
>> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>> 
>> 
>> 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
> 
> 
> 

Sent from my Sprint iPhone


RE: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Otis L. Surratt, Jr.
By end user I mean hosting clients (cloud, collocation, shared, dedicated, VPS, 
etc.) of any sort. For example you have clients that would needsay /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."  wrote:
> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>
> 
> 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





Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 8/3/12 3:42 PM, William Pitcock wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> On Aug 3, 2012, at 2:22 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr."  wrote:
> 
>> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>>
>> Just wondering, with so many IPv6 resources in a single allocation it
>> would seem difficult to charge anything at all.
>>
>> 1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?
> 
> If revenue from IPv4 assignments is an issue, then the solution is to adjust 
> your business model to not depend on that revenue.  As an ISP, the business 
> is to ship bits around.
> 


To that end I've never charged for IPv4, either.

~Seth



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread George Herbert
If anyone's ISPs are overcharging them, I will be able to provide
service for no more than 1 cent per available routable IPv6 address in
any netblock from /64 on up.  We have a reasonable startup rate of a
/56 for the price of a /64 for the remainder of 2012, even!

-george

On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 3:37 PM, Derek Ivey  wrote:
> If my ISP charged me fees for IPv6 space, I'd ditch them. They already make
> enough money as is from modem/cable box rentals.
>
> Derek
>
>
> On 8/3/2012 6:12 PM, Cameron Byrne wrote:
>>
>> On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 12:22 PM, Otis L. Surratt, Jr. 
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>>>
>>> Just wondering, with so many IPv6 resources in a single allocation it
>>> would seem difficult to charge anything at all.
>>>
>>> 1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?
>>> 2. Are you charging anything?
>>> 3. Is the cost built into the service?
>>> 4. Do you assign IPv6 space to end user and charge admin fee?
>>>
>>> Take care,
>>>
>>> Otis
>>>
>> IPv6 users cost me less money (CGN resources), i wish i had a business
>> method for giving them discounts and meaningful incentives for using
>> IPv6.
>>
>> Today, my retail mobile phones users can have 1 NAT'd IPv4 address or
>> 2^64 public IPv6 addresses + NAT64 to reach IPv4 destinations.   Most
>> don't use the IPv6 address option yet :(
>>
>> But the number of folks electing to use IPv6 is increasing with more
>> phones available (4 Androids now support HSPA+ IPv6) and more IPv6
>> awareness
>>
>> CB
>>
>
>



-- 
-george william herbert
george.herb...@gmail.com



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread William Pitcock
Hi,

On Aug 3, 2012, at 2:22 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr."  wrote:

> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
> 
> Just wondering, with so many IPv6 resources in a single allocation it
> would seem difficult to charge anything at all.
> 
> 1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?

If revenue from IPv4 assignments is an issue, then the solution is to adjust 
your business model to not depend on that revenue.  As an ISP, the business is 
to ship bits around.

> 2. Are you charging anything?

Haven't ever charged for IPv6 allocations...

> 3. Is the cost built into the service?

The cost of IPv6 is so negligible (well unless you need advanced software 
licenses -- hi brocade), that I don't see any point in even accounting the cost 
of providing IPv6 into a service fee.

> 4. Do you assign IPv6 space to end user and charge admin fee?

By assign, do you mean SWIP?  Some places charge an admin fee to do a SWIP, but 
for setting up an allocation, I have never heard of an admin fee.

William


Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Derek Ivey
If my ISP charged me fees for IPv6 space, I'd ditch them. They already 
make enough money as is from modem/cable box rentals.


Derek

On 8/3/2012 6:12 PM, Cameron Byrne wrote:

On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 12:22 PM, Otis L. Surratt, Jr.  wrote:

Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p

Just wondering, with so many IPv6 resources in a single allocation it
would seem difficult to charge anything at all.

1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?
2. Are you charging anything?
3. Is the cost built into the service?
4. Do you assign IPv6 space to end user and charge admin fee?

Take care,

Otis


IPv6 users cost me less money (CGN resources), i wish i had a business
method for giving them discounts and meaningful incentives for using
IPv6.

Today, my retail mobile phones users can have 1 NAT'd IPv4 address or
2^64 public IPv6 addresses + NAT64 to reach IPv4 destinations.   Most
don't use the IPv6 address option yet :(

But the number of folks electing to use IPv6 is increasing with more
phones available (4 Androids now support HSPA+ IPv6) and more IPv6
awareness

CB






Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Cameron Byrne
On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 12:22 PM, Otis L. Surratt, Jr.  wrote:
> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
>
> Just wondering, with so many IPv6 resources in a single allocation it
> would seem difficult to charge anything at all.
>
> 1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?
> 2. Are you charging anything?
> 3. Is the cost built into the service?
> 4. Do you assign IPv6 space to end user and charge admin fee?
>
> Take care,
>
> Otis
>

IPv6 users cost me less money (CGN resources), i wish i had a business
method for giving them discounts and meaningful incentives for using
IPv6.

Today, my retail mobile phones users can have 1 NAT'd IPv4 address or
2^64 public IPv6 addresses + NAT64 to reach IPv4 destinations.   Most
don't use the IPv6 address option yet :(

But the number of folks electing to use IPv6 is increasing with more
phones available (4 Androids now support HSPA+ IPv6) and more IPv6
awareness

CB



Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Cutler James R
On Aug 3, 2012, at 3:22 PM, "Otis L. Surratt, Jr."  wrote:
> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
> 
> 
> 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




Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread TJ
FWIW - Comcast isn't charging for native connectivity to residential users.


/TJ


On Fri, Aug 3, 2012 at 3:38 PM, Seth Mattinen  wrote:

> On 8/3/12 12:22 PM, Otis L. Surratt, Jr. wrote:
> > Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
> >
>
> Nope, and no plans to.
>
> ~Seth
>
>


Re: IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Seth Mattinen
On 8/3/12 12:22 PM, Otis L. Surratt, Jr. wrote:
> Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p
> 

Nope, and no plans to.

~Seth



IPv6 End User Fee

2012-08-03 Thread Otis L. Surratt, Jr.
Anyone charging end users for IPv6 space yet? :p

Just wondering, with so many IPv6 resources in a single allocation it
would seem difficult to charge anything at all.

1. How are you making up loss of revenue on IPv4 assignments?
2. Are you charging anything?
3. Is the cost built into the service?
4. Do you assign IPv6 space to end user and charge admin fee?

Take care,

Otis