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ISP Column


The ISP Column is published by Geoff Huston as a service of the Internet Society to its members. The opinions expressed within do not necessarily represent the views of the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre, nor those of the Internet Society.

What IPv6 Address is That?

August 2008
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If you have enabled IPv6 on your computer, and in an idle moment you’ve browsed through the interface configuration information for IPv6 addresses you may have been a little surprised by the fact that there’s not just one IPv6 address that’s been loaded, but many. With IPv4 there was a single address that was bound to each interface, but when using IPv6 its not so clear, and an interface can have a number of IPv6 addresses simultaneously. (more…)

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The Future of the Internet - A Political View

July 2008
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On June 17th and 18th the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) hosted a Ministerial Meeting on the Future of the Internet Economy, attended by Ministers for communications from the 30 OECD member nations and some 15 other nations, all to talk about the future of the Internet Economy. (more…)

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10 Years Later

June 2008
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In this article I’d like to present personal perspective of the evolution of the Internet over the last decade, highlighting my impressions of what has worked, what has not and what has changed over this period. It has been an extraordinary decade for the Internet, encompassing a boom and a bust that would rate with history’s best, a comprehensive restructuring of the global communications industry, and a set of changes that have altered the way in which each of us now work and play. (more…)

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The End of End to End?

May 2008
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One of the major principles of the architecture of the Internet was encapsulated in a paper by Saltzer, Reed and Clark, “End-to-End Arguments in System Design”. This paper, originally published in 1981, encapsulated vary clearly the looming tension between the network and the application: (more…)

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IPv6 Deployment: Just where are we?

April 2008

Geoff Huston & George Michaelson

I suppose we all know the plot by now. Back in the early 1990’s it was forecast that we would run out of IPv4 addresses well before we were ready for the Internet to stop working, and that we’d need to transition the Internet to use a new version of the IP protocol that allowed for a larger address space if we wanted to avoid the problem. In response to this, the technical community came up with a specification for IP version 6 by the mid 1990’s and we were all set. (more…)

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Tubular Routing

March 2008
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I suppose it had to happen one of these days. Sooner or later a routing hijack would get its 15 seconds of fame in the industry press, and the incident relating to the YouTube prefix just happened to be the one that was selected by the media because of the players involved rather than the rather mundane characteristics of the routing leak itself. (more…)

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IPv6 Transition Tools and Tui

February 2008
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In every ISP’s engineering group there invariably lurks a list of those tasks that lie just a little a bit beyond the normal day to day activity of reacting to events as they happen. For many the item “IPv6??!! has been on this “to do” list for some years, if not for the entire lifetime of the ISP itself! (more…)

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DNSSEC - Once More, with Feeling!

January 2008
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After looking at the state of DNSSEC in some detail a little over ayear ago in 2006, I’ve been intending to come back to DNSSEC to see if anything has changed, for better or worse, in the intervening period. (more…)

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On the Hunt for Critical Internet Resources

December 2007
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I’m writing this column in November, and that means that its time for the travelling circus known as the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) to come down to earth, unpack its tents and sell tickets for its annual song and dance routine. The script for this year’s show has been changed, and after being excluded from the main arena last year at the Athens gig, the headline act of “Critical Internet Resources” is taking a starring role this year in Rio. Some folk are even saying that it’s the single most contentious issue to be scheduled at this year’s IGF show. (more…)

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NANOGGING

November 2007
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There are many network operator group meetings being held these days. Even in the backwater of the South Pacific where I live there is now AUSNOG, and NZNOG is just next door in New Zealand. We now have MENOG in the Middle East and AFNOG in Africa. The original NOG was the North American Network Operators Group, NANOG, and they have the T-Shirts to prove it! NANOG meets three times a year, and I attended NANOG 41 in October 2007. NANOG meetings cover a broad variety of topics, from operational tools, measurement, and peering practices through to a commentary on the state of the Internet industry. Here’s my impressions of the meeting. (more…)

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IPv6 Local Addresses

October 2007
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I suppose I’m no different to many people who have spent some time in the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in making the observation that I’ve always been fascinated by the process of technology development. (more…)

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Trust

September 2007

Trust and networking go hand in hand, and I’m pleased to see that the topic of trust has been raised by the Internet Society recently. (more…)

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Disclaimer

The ISP Column is published as a service to its members. The opinions expressed within do not necessarily represent the views of the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre, nor those of the Internet Society.

About the Author

GEOFF HUSTON holds a B.Sc. and a M.Sc. from the Australian National University. He has been closely involved with the development of the Internet for many years, particularly within Australia, where he was responsible for the initial build of the Internet within the Australian academic and research sector. He is author of a number of Internet-related books, and is currently the Chief Scientist at APNIC, the Regional Internet Registry serving the Asia Pacific region. He was a member of the Internet Architecture Board from 1999 until 2005, and served on the Board of the Internet Society from 1992 until 2001.