Produced in Partnership with Wharton

Supernova Interview – John Curran of ARIN and IP version 6

We’re long past the days when you can pickup the phone and ask the operator to connect you to “Pennsyvania 6-5000″. However, the Internet is starting to feel old in that way – we’re running out of addresses for the Internet Protocol Version 4 – yes, those numbers like 192.168.1.1 that one encounters when setting up a home network. In 700 days there won’t be anymore – so we need to move to IP version 6. This move has analogies in the Digital TV transition and the addition of area codes to the phone network a few years ago.

There are big blocks of these numbers that ISPs like AT&T are allocated to use by ARIN, the American Registry for Internet Numbers (and 4 other global RINs around the world). IPv4 is 32bits – 4 billion possible numbers – but that’s not enough, according to ARIN CEO John Curran. He’s working to get people to adopt IPv6. In the following video interview, John describes the situation and gives some good business reasons why people should start paying attention to this issue.

“You don’t want to be left behind on a fixed sized network in an Internet ‘backwater’” says Curran.

Ed Note: Please forgive some of the network glitches – net video is still not perfect.

3 Responses to “Supernova Interview – John Curran of ARIN and IP version 6”

  1. [...] interview, John Curran, president and CEO of the American Registry of Internet Numbers, explained why businesses need to sit up and take notice of the impending shift that is taking place as we move from Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) to [...]

  2. [...] a recent interview, John Curran, president and CEO of ARIN, explained why businesses need to sit up and take notice of the impending shift that is taking place as we move from Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) to [...]

  3. Thanks for this post, answers a bunch of questions I was having.

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