Thursday, June 2, 2016

IoT Is the Ultimate Driver for Global Adoption of IPv6!

Since my recent article entitled “No IoT without IPv6” published by Computerworld, many people have provided very good feedback and comments. They also have asked a very good question: Why we are still talking about adopting IPv6 after so many years? It has been more than a decade since the U. S. government first formally requested federal agencies to adopt IPv6 and incorporate it in their enterprise architecture (EA) as stated in the 2005 OMB Memo; and it has been more than two decades since many people first started talking about the need to transition to IPv6.

Obviously, there are many reasons for the delays of IPv6 adoption worldwide. On one hand, as I commented previously in some of my online postings, changes are always difficult and many people simply don't like change. A lot of people also consider that IPv6 is boring because it is related to the network infrastructure.

On the other hand, many people don't understand it or simply don't care about it because, at the end of the day, IPv6 is a technical matter. For instance, IPv6 as part of the internet-layered protocols, is often, but not always, considered roughly as a subset of the Network Layer of the ISO OSI model. Not many people outside of the networking infrastructure or similar domains are familiar with it or care enough about it.

To make things even more unnecessarily complicated, while some people with non-technical background would like to constantly drag such a technical issue into the messy geopolitical discussions and debates in the international forums, many people involved with the research of IoT do not even think that they will ever need to use IPv6 or IP at all, because they are only focusing on different layers of the OSI model in their specific part of the world. Some individuals even think that they can deploy IoT using IPv4 and NAT.

In addition, the message on this technical issue must be clear, precise, and consistent, and it must be easy for the non-technical people to understand. However, that is not always the case. In my opinion, for far too many years, this technical issue of transitioning to IPv6 from IPv4 has become way too complicated, whether intentionally by some people or not.

As I wrote in an article last year entitled “IPv6, It's Easier Than You Think!”, ultimately, enabling IPv6 is only a configuration change to the existing networking infrastructure! This is especially true when we only enable the IPv6 in a dual-stack mode of operations (using both IPv6 and IPv4) where there is NO impact on the existing IPv4 functions or operations during the transition period.

It cannot be more clear and simple than that. Consequently, one should ask: when was the last time that the Board of Directors or the president of a company has to decide and approve an IT configuration change request for its network infrastructure, which not only does not impact its current IPv4 operations, but also is completely transparent to the end users?

In the final analysis, however, money is still one of the main reasons that have hindered the global IPv6 adoption so far. In many cases, at least as in the past, adopting and deploying IPv6 not only does not immediately generate revenue, but cost money: It needs money to train the engineers and IT staff about IPv6; it costs money to upgrade the existing network infrastructure and systems to enable IPv6 if they are dated; it doesn't provide the immediate ROI. For many companies, it doesn't help with the short-term share prices or meet the Wall Street expectations for the quarterly earnings and revenues in the short run...

As a result, there has been no particular incentive for many companies, especially for those companies in the networking and security business, such as network hardware manufactures and software application companies, to invest in R&D to fully support IPv6 and to ensure that all of their current products and services will support the full feature set of IPv6 as much as they would for IPv4.

If the major networking manufacturers and security companies cannot ensure that all of their current products and services will fully support IPv6, it will undoubtedly prevent the customers from deploying IPv6 easily and smoothly even if they want to. If the current security appliances and software cannot fully support IPv6, how can you expect the customers to fully adopt IPv6 without the fear that their IPv6 deployment may not be secured or at least as secured as the current IPv4 products and services, even though the level of security in IPv4 is still questionable given what is happening on a daily basis in cybersecurity breaches nowadays?

This all comes down to the point as I mentioned in my article that adopting IPv6 requires long term vision and leadership from the top management of the companies. They must realize that adopting IPv6 is a competitive edge for their companies as well as for their shareholders in the long run, especially in the global context.

Most importantly, the whole concept is simple, the goal is clear, the scope of the task is precise, and it is worth repeating here again:

Adopting and deploying the new Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) is only a configuration change to the existing IT infrastructure. 

By enabling a separate IPv6 stack in the current IPv4 computing environment (dual-stack) during the transition period, it will not impact the existing IPv4 functions or operations.

If we can all communicate consistently and precisely this idea to the non-technical stakeholders as well as the regular Internet users, I am confident that many people will be able to comprehend this issue and eventually be supportive of this global initiative.

The good news is that for the past a few years, especially for the past year or two, many companies started to realize the potential huge impact of IoT on their bottom line. After all, IoT represents at least several trillion dollars’ new business opportunities for many companies around the world.

That is why we have seen that worldwide IPv6 traffic have increased rather significantly since 2014 based on some of the IPv6 indicators, such as the information provided by Google – from less than 3% in 2014 to over 11% in May 2016.

It is for this reason that over two years’ ago I stated in my opinion article published by Computerworld on May 1, 2014 that “To a large extent, the Internet of Things will be the ultimate driver of global adoption of IPv6 in the coming years.

Today, I still strongly believe that IoT will be the ultimate driver for global adoption of IPv6 for the very same reason, just as passionate as I was two years ago.

Only time will tell and history will be the judge.


Reference for this article:

Sun, Charles. “IoT Is the Ultimate Driver for Global Adoption of IPv6!”. 2 June 2016. https://ipv6czar.blogspot.com/2016/06/iot-is-ultimate-driver-for-global.html

Disclaimer: The views presented are only personal opinions and they do not necessarily represent those of the U.S. Government.


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