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On April 19-22 2026 the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) convenes its 57th Public Policy and Members Meeting in Louisville, Kentucky. This semi-annual forum is an opportunity for the Internet community to discuss proposed policies for Internet number resource management, hear organizational reports, and network with industry peers. ARIN provides live transcri

https://isoc.live/20814/

#post #2026 #ARIN #NumberPolicy #RIR

@tschaefer i do ipv4 only for lack of complexity sake but i understand we are running out of addresses. maybe i just don't understand or appreciate the real appeal of ipv6 #arin #name rez #sdr #hosts #bind #unbound

Full confession: I run IPv4-only at home purely for simplicity. I get the address scarcity issue, but maybe I just don't see the real appeal yet.

The Core Appeal of IPv6: It's not just more addresses—it's about reclaiming end-to-end connectivity. No NAT, no port forwarding hassles. Every device gets a globally reachable IP.

For DNS/Naming (like #BIND/#Unbound): It eliminates the need for ugly NAT reflection/"hairpinning" to access internal services from your LAN. The host just works, internally and externally.

For SDR/Hosting: Imagine running an SDR server or a personal host—you can give it a static /64 prefix and actually reach it without wrestling with UPnP or carrier-grade NAT.

The Complexity Trade-off: You're right, dual-stack is complex. But the long-term play is IPv6-only with DNS64/NAT64 to handle legacy IPv4 traffic. That's actually less complexity than maintaining two parallel stacks forever.

#ARIN Reality: They're essentially out of IPv4. If you need more than a tiny allocation, v6 is the only path forward."

@job BER? Wtf #arin

Come on, just a couple more #ASPA objects! We can get them today!

If you have ASes in #RIPE or #ARIN, go to your portal and issue them!