| ▲ | teraflop 20 hours ago | |
I can think of at least two reasons why this isn't worth worrying about. One is quantitative: you have to remember that 2^48 is a much much bigger number than 2^32. With 2^32 IPv4 addresses, you have about 0.5 addresses per human being on the planet, so right away you can tell that stringent allocation policies will be needed. On the other hand, with 2^48 /48 ranges, there are about 8,000 ranges per human being. So even if you hand a few /48s out free to literally everyone who asks, the vast majority will still be unallocated. A /48 is only about 0.01% of what could be said to be a "fair" allocation. (And yet, a /48 is so huge in absolute terms that even the vast majority of organizations would never need more than one of them, let alone individuals.) The other is that unlike, say, the crude oil we pump out of the ground, IP address ranges are a renewable resource. If you hand out a free /48 to every person at birth, then long before you start running out of ranges, people will start dying and you can just reclaim the addresses they were using. | ||