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Monday, March 17, 2025

New Era of the In­ter­net

T&T switches to IPv6

In­ter­net Ser­vice Providers must up­grade their servers

by

20140219

The In­ter­net will run out of ad­dress space soon­er than you think.

In the next few months, as more of us get our hands on smart­phones and tablets, and then ex­pect easy con­nec­tiv­i­ty, it won't be that easy.

Here's why: the ex­ist­ing tech­nol­o­gy called IPv4 (In­ter­net pro­to­col ver­sion four), which has pow­ered IP ad­dress­es since the very ear­ly days ofthe mod­ern In­ter­net, will soon be ex­haust­ed.

That's be­cause every "smart" de­vice--from phones to watch­es to "iRo­bot" kitchen ap­pli­ances--needs an IP ad­dress to con­nect to the in­ter­net. With the wide­spread pro­lif­er­a­tion of such de­vices, IPv4 in­ter­net ad­dress­es are run­ningout faster than any­one saw com­ing, with an es­ti­mat­ed two to six­months left.

That's why a switch is nec­es­sary. T&T's in­ter­net ser­vice providers (ISPs) must up­grade to In­ter­net Pro­to­col ver­sion six (IPv6).

"IPv6 is crit­i­cal to the fu­ture of the In­ter­net," Telecom­mu­ni­ca­tions Au­thor­i­ty of T&T (TATT) CEO Cris Seecha­ran said to the T&T Guardian.

As ver­sion four's suc­ces­sor, IPv6 will of­fer far more nu­mer­i­cal ad­dress­es and ad­di­tion­al net­work se­cu­ri­ty fea­tures.

To ad­dress this im­pend­ing change, TATThost­ed an open fo­rum on Mon­day at their of­fice in Barataria, in­tend­ed to sen­si­tise ISP­sand oth­er stake­hold­ers about the grow­ing need to up­grade their servers.

Chair­man of the Au­thor­i­ty Sel­by Wil­son's first words to the au­di­ence as he wel­comed them were: "IPv6 is no longer com­ing soon;it is here. We no longer have a choice. We need to be­gin to mi­grate away from IPv4."

The meet­ing was fa­cil­i­tat­ed by the Man­ag­er of Com­mu­ni­ca­tions and Ex­ter­nal Re­la­tions Ernesto Maj�and Chief Tech­nol­o­gy Of­fi­cer Car­los Mart�nez of Latin Amer­i­ca and Caribbean In­ter­net Ad­dress­es Reg­istry (LAC­NIC), which pro­vides ad­dress­es for the re­gion, in­clud­ing T&T.

Wil­son said: "In 1981, the on­ly com­put­ers with In­ter­net ac­cess were part of mil­i­tary or re­search or­gan­i­sa­tions. Thir­ty years and mil­lions up­on mil­lions of In­ter­net users lat­er, the avail­able ad­dress­es in IPv4 have been ex­haust­ed."

Ac­cord­ing to Wil­son, LAC­NIC has ad­vised TATT that there were no more IPv4 ad­dress­es avail­able to ISPs in their re­spec­tive re­gions, and so IPv6 ad­dress­es would now be is­sued when­ev­er re­quests were made for ad­di­tion­al In­ter­net ad­dress space.

But for the new ad­dress­es to work, servers must be up­grad­ed.

One au­di­ence mem­ber from The Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies (UWI), St Au­gus­tine said since 2008 the uni­ver­si­ty was prepar­ing to tran­si­tion to IPv6 by con­duct­ing re­search and do­ing tests.

He said an IPv6 plan was fi­nalised and two years ago for the cam­pus, but could not get the in­fra­struc­tur­al sup­port from UWI's ISP, which re­mained un­named.

"Our biggest bar­ri­er we had was ac­tu­al­ly our ISP. When we con­tact­ed our ISP many years ago, up un­til 2009 they did not have a plan (for IPv6)."

He said the roll-out came to a halt, even though the uni­ver­si­ty is ready for the more ca­pa­ble ver­sion.

"Our ISP stopped us dead on the tracks."

While TATT was tak­ing on a more fa­cil­i­ta­tive role, Seecha­ran said it was on­ly a mat­ter of time be­fore ISPs in T&T would be forced to make the switch.

More in­fo:

In ad­di­tion to a vast­ly ex­pand­ed ad­dress space, IPv6 of­fers a wide range of im­prove­ments, in­clud­ing:

-Se­cu­ri­ty en­hance­ments

-State­less au­to con­fig­u­ra­tion

-Su­pe­ri­or mo­bil­i­ty

-En­hanced sub­net ad­dress man­age­ment

-Sim­pli­fied net­work ad­min­is­tra­tion

-Built-in mul­ti­cas­t­ing

-New Qual­i­ty of Ser­vice fea­tures

Catch­ing up:

Glob­al­ly the switch to IPv6 has been tak­ing place at a rapid pace. Ac­cord­ing to the IPv6 Launch web­site in June 2013 � "The num­ber of IPv6-con­nect­ed users has dou­bled since World IPv6 Launch be­gan on June 6, 2012, when thou­sands of ISPs, home net­work­ing equip­ment man­u­fac­tur­ers, and Web com­pa­nies around the world came to­geth­er to per­ma­nent­ly en­able the next gen­er­a­tion of In­ter­net Pro­to­col (IPv6) for their prod­ucts and ser­vices. This marks the third straight year IPv6 use on the glob­al In­ter­net has dou­bled. If cur­rent trends con­tin­ue, more than half of In­ter­net users around the world will be IPv6-con­nect­ed in less than 6 years."


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