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What is the Internet Society?
Global organisation of members, chapters and partners to promote the open development, evolution, and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people throughout the world
– Encourages open development of standards, protocols, administration
– Provides reliable information about the Internet
– Leads and facilitates discussion of issues that affect Internet evolution and developments
– Fosters growth in developing countries through education and training/
– Encouraging participation and develops new leaders in areas important to the evolution of the Internet
– Leads and facilitates discussion of issues that affect Internet evolution and developments.
– People seeking to implement these protocols are confused by a lack of clear, concise deployment information
The Deploy360 solution: – Provide hands-on information on IPv6, DNSSEC, TLS for
Applications, Securing BGP, and Anti-spoofing to advance real-world deployment
– Work with first adopters to collect and create technical resources and distribute these resources to fast following networks
History Founded in 1992 by Internet pioneers Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn as an international nonprofit organization. The Internet Society is the organizational home of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), the primary entity responsible for establishing the Internet’s open standards and best practices. For more details, visit www.internetsociety.org/history
IPv6 Deployment Status
Network operator measurements, 16 April 2016 Data sources: Google, Yahoo!, Akamai, Facebook, LinkedIn For measurement methodology details, see http://www.worldipv6launch.org/apps/ipv6week/measurement/timeline-nets.html#notes
About Deploy360
The Challenge: – The IETF creates protocols based on open standards, but
some are not widely known or deployed
– People seeking to implement these protocols are confused by a lack of clear, concise deployment information
The Deploy360 solution: – Provide hands-on information on IPv6, DNSSEC, TLS for
Applications, Securing BGP, and Anti-spoofing to advance real-world deployment
– Work with first adopters to collect and create technical resources and distribute these resources to fast following networks
Web Portal (Online knowledge repository)
• Technical documents • Case Studies • Tutorials and Guides • Blogs
Social Media (Constant audience engagement)
• Twitter • Facebook • Google+ • YouTube
Speaking Engagements (Come meet us or invite us to Speak)
• Network Operatprs’ Groups • IPv6 Summits • Interops • Other relevant events
ION Conferences (Hands-on educational events)
• Bangladesh • China • Pacific (tbc)
Deploy360 Components
Web Portal – http://www.isoc.org/deploy360
IPv6, DNSSEC, Securing BGP, TLS for Applications, Anti-Spoofing knowledge base including tutorials, case studies, training resources, etc..
Content specific to: – Network Operators – Developers – Content Providers – Consumer Electronics
Manufacturers – Enterprise Customers
Blog posts
Social media integration
We need your help!
Adding more content – Actively engaging with industry
professionals to curate or create deployment content
– Help us develop materials based on your experiences (we credit you)
– Point us to useful resources – Tutorials, guides, HOWTOs, reports,
white papers, tools, developer libraries and case studies
Suggest topics and features that should be included
Helping with translations
Background
§ Very distributed organisation
§ Nearly 100 staff based in (at least) 23 countries on every continent
§ Two main offices in Reston, USA and Geneva, Switzerland
§ Regional offices in Amsterdam, Montevideo and Singapore
§ Many staff are home-based
§ Staff often highly tech-savvy
§ Tends to be a MacOS X & iOS environment
IPv6 infrastructure
§ Main offices in Reston and Geneva run IPv6 internally
– Reston has native IPv6 connection to Internet
– Geneva uses tunnelled IPv6 connection to Internet as ISP does not offer native IPv6 at affordable price
– Amsterdam has native IPv6 connection via NLnet Labs
– Montevideo probably has IPv6 connection as co-located with LACNIC.
– Singapore possibly doesn’t have IPv6 connection as managed office space.
IPv6 external services
§ Web servers support native IPv6
§ ISOC Connect Platform used for community collaboration
– Utilises gateway to support IPv6 connectivity
– Key parts of platform such as CSS don’t support IPv6
– Certain content will not display properly on IPv6 only connection
§ Zoom Conferencing Platform
– Used internal and community meetings
– Doesn’t currently support IPv6, slated for ‘sometime in 2016’
IPv6 internal services
§ ISOC has a diverse range of tools – often on departmental basis
– Office 365, mostly supports IPv6 but not all features
– Box, no IPv6 support and no specific implementation dates
– Drupal & Wordpress, certain modules don’t handle IPv6
– Basecamp, no IPv6 support
– Skype, IPv6 support in Business Edition only?
– Jabber/Adium, does support IPv6
ISOC IPv6 policy
§ Officially our policy is use IPv6 supported tools, but…
– Our hosting provider doesn’t support IPv6. Yes alternatives are possible, but contractual and personnel considerations
– Legacy systems that need to be migrated/deprecated
– ISOC staff have habit of introducing new tools to solve a particular problem at a particular time
– Many specialist tools simply don’t have IPv6 support, and vendors claim no demand to add it
– Home workers often can’t get IPv6, or not straightforward to obtain
Prospects for IPv6
§ ISOC (like many) is highly dependent on the state of global connectivity
§ Global IPv6 capability averages somewhere up to 10% (Google), but ranges from 0% (Ethiopia) to 40% (Belgium)
§ I work in Amsterdam, Brisbane and Oxford
– Virgin Media, currently no support for IPv6 and no timetable
– iiNet (via NBN), no support for IPv6, although had 6rd trial
– Ziggo (formerly UPC), are actively rolling out IPv6 ;-)
§ Mobile connectivity is increasingly important
§ Officially our policy is use IPv6 supported tools, but…
– Our hosting provider doesn’t support IPv6. Yes alternatives are possible, but contractual and personnel considerations
– Legacy systems that need to be migrated/deprecated
– ISOC staff have habit of introducing new tools to solve a particular problem at a particular time
– Many specialist tools simply don’t have IPv6 support, and vendors claim no demand to add it
– Home workers often can’t get IPv6, or not straightforward to obtain