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posted by janrinok on Thursday June 07 2018, @03:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the don't-give-huge-blocks-to-businesses dept.

Things are looking up for our next-generation internet.

[...] But the shortage of IPv4 elbow room became a steadily worsening issue -- have you noticed all those phones that can connect to the network now, for example? So tech companies banded together to try to advance IPv6. The result: World IPv6 Day on June 8, 2011, when tech giants like Google, Facebook and Yahoo tested IPv6 sites to find any problems. For a sequel, they restarted those IPv6 connections and left them on starting on World IPv6 Launch Day, June 6, 2012.

Back then, there was still a risk that IPv6 wouldn't attract a critical mass of usage even with the tech biggies on board. The result would've been an internet complicated by multilayer trickery called network address translation, or NAT, that let multiple devices share the same IP address. But statistics released Wednesday by one IPv6 organizer, the Internet Society, show that IPv6 is growing steadily in usage, with about a quarter of us now using it worldwide. It looks like we're finally moving into a future that's been within our grasp since the Clinton administration.

"While there is obviously more to be done -- like roll out IPv6 to the other 75 percent of the Internet -- it's becoming clear that IPv6 is here to stay and is well-positioned to support the Internet's growth for the next several decades," said Lorenzo Colitti, a Google software engineer who's worked on IPv6 for years.

[...] How much room does IPv6 have? Enough to give network addresses to 340 undecillion devices -- that's two to the 128th power, or 340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 if you're keeping score.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 08 2018, @05:47AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 08 2018, @05:47AM (#690223)

    By the time of what most people think of as the "slave trade", Europeans only supported the idea of indentured servants, who signed contracts of employment; at the expiration of such a contract, the servant would become a free man, and would maybe even be given a parcel of land of his own, etc.

    True slavery was introduced into the American colonies by a black African named Anthony Johnson, who had himself been a slave and was freed by white people when they bought him as an indentured servant. Anthony Johnson became the first legally recognized slave owner in the colonies, after he hoodwinked fellow Africans into obligating themselves contractually, and thus began once more among Europeans (particularly of the Common Law systems) legal recognition of slavery in general.