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[IP] more on China Builds a Better Internet





Begin forwarded message:

From: tomvest@xxxxxxxxxxx
Date: September 26, 2006 10:41:36 AM EDT
To: Fred Baker <fred@xxxxxxxxx>, ip@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: David Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [IP] more on China Builds a Better Internet


On Sep 26, 2006, at 8:13 AM, David Farber wrote:

I do wish people would stop propagating that "MIT has more IP
addresses than all of china" meme.

To my shame, I'm the guy who originated that. When I showed the slide
at ChinaInet 2000 that asserted that (and got the name of the school
wrong), it was true. But my point was not that APNIC had committed
some form of wrong-doing. That slide was one in a series that argued
that China, where I was giving the talk, needed to get serious about
Internet deployment, and that specifically to address the needs of a
population of 1.5 billion people it would have to move in the
direction of an IP address space with that many addresses - as
adjusted by the H ratio. They needed to move into IPv6 as IPv4 would
not have the address space they needed.

I have seen that slide in talks selling my competitor's product,
slides selling the ITU as an even broker in the Internet Governance
debate (which I will believe after I find +886 in the enum database;
geo-politics is keeping a recognized PSTN country code out of the
enum database because the relevant communication region's status as a
country is disputed and they are not a member of the ITU), and
others. In most cases, I wonder whether they even know the origin of
the slide.

Of course, at this point China has quite a few more addresses than it
did then. But the entire unallocated IPv4 address space doesn't have
enough addresses to represent the Chinese educational system, much
less China as a whole. The original argument is still valid.

Hi Fred,

Thanks for clarifying the source of this pernicious comparison, and the rationale. It seems to me that demographics alone makes China's -- and humanity's -- implicit future requirement for expanded address resources indisputable. However, the manifest requirement in 2000 (based on ITU stats and relevant firsthand experience) was still pretty modest -- well below the HD-deflated total address space allocated to CN by the end of 2000, or the HD-deflated total address space originated by the 28 publicly visible Chinese ASes that were in production back then. As I understand it, CNNIC defines an "Internet user" as anyone who gets online by any means for at least one hour per month, and there really was (is) no competition or other macro- level institutional factors that might inflate the addressing requirement at that time much beyond what one might estimate to be peak simultaneous usage rates for 9m asynchronous (metered dial-up) users, 20m ad-hoc "users", 5k DSL subs, and 70k CN-flagged hosts (most of which, for reasons unique to China, were actually likely to be there rather than elsewhere).

As you rightly note, China accounts for much more (i.e., 600% +) address space now -- and still enjoys a comfortable padding between the current HD-deflated total supply of addresses and the estimated, peak-sim-usage adjusted total need. China's official interconnecting carriers are all "very large" members of APNIC, meaning that the only constraint they face with respect to IP addressing is demonstrated need, calculated using the same rules that apply to all network operators these days. CNNIC controls all other domestic IP address uses, so -- apart from "objectively demonstrated need" at the national level -- all of the factors affecting supply and demand for address resources in China are internal to China.

All of this is completely consistent with your recent note, but given the misunderstanding and misappropriation of the first comparison, I thought some additional details might be useful. MIT may have been fortunate in its proximity to the invention of the Internet, much as other countries/institutions are favored by their "lucky" proximity to other scarce resources. That said, the extra-national institutions for IP address distribution that have been in place for the last decade-plus appear to have done quite a good job of servicing concurrent "objective" demand, which means that IPv4 addresses should last as long as possible to satisfy "objective" demand in the years to come.

Too bad perhaps that the system wasn't established a decade earlier. Too bad perhaps that it doesn't always assure the same measure of efficiency across other levels of the address distribution system. We can only hope that these insights will be preserved, and strengthened, in the yet-to-be-defined institutions that will inform the IPv6 distribution process...

Tom




















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