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'Anemic' adoption imperils IPv6, says consultant

'Anemic' adoption imperils IPv6, says consultant

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 14 Nov 2011 For: Network World Canada Creator

Service providers and enterprises should find business cases for new Internet technologies or they will be in trouble, a conference has been told

Two new and vital Internet protocols won’t be adopted by service providers or organizations unless supporters build a business case for managers, a consultant has warned a Canadian conference.

Implementation of the IPv6 addressing scheme and the DNSSEC (Domain Name System Security Extensions) IP address authentication specification has been “anemic,” bill st. arnaud of Ottawa’s St. Arnaud-Walker and Associates told the Canadian ISP Summit on Monday in Toronto.

“If we don’t do something soon, the future of these two protocols is in doubt,” he said.

IPv6 is an addressing protocol needed because the existing IPv4 protocol is running out of addresses. DNSSEC is needed to protect desktop clients from forged DNS data in caches. But, the conference was told by a number of speakers, there’s hesitation by many in the Internet environment – from enterprises to carriers – to move quickly.

The culprit fingered by many speakers is lack of demand by end users.

The solution, says St. Arnaud, is to find a business case that makes adoption of new technologies worthwhile.

For example, his company is working with the SURFnet education and research network in the Netherlands to create an IPv6-only LTE wireless network to be built by the country’s phone company, KPN. SURFnet has an IPv6 wired network and wants adoption to spread. The solution is to get KPN to build a new IPv6 wireless network. To pay for it, SURFnet is leasing much-needed IPv4 addresses to the phone company. To generate demand for the new network, it will offer unlimited data for university students who can only use IPv6-enabled smart phones and tablets. The result, it is hoped, that demand for IPv6 devices will increase. The project is currently in a pilot.

 “We’ve been at IPv6 for 10 years … and how far have we got?” St. Arnaud asked in an interview. “I’ve been at dozens of these types of conferences where everybody says ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, IPv6!’ and nothing happens.”

What service providers and enterprises should do, he said, is “run a pilot, find a new market, find a new business case that enables IPv6 and also enables new applications and business opportunities.”

Strategies for adopting IPv6 and DNSSEC was the theme of the first day of the conference’s first day.

There was general agreement that Canadian ISPs haven’t got much further than testing the protocols for a variety of reasons.

Chris Allen, president of British Columbia’s ABC Communications, said in an interview that his company is waiting for Telus Communications, its wholesale provider, to implement IPv6 on its network. Other Canadian ISPs are waiting for their large carrier suppliers to do the same, he said.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more
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