Today, Wednesday December 28 2016, ION Bucharest 2016 – which took place on October 12 2016 – will be restreamed live on the Internet Society Livestream Channel. The Internet Society’s Deploy 360 team host a series of presentations, plus a panel, on the latest developments with DNSSEC, DANE, MANRS, and IPv6 with an emphasis on Romania.
On November 11 2013, the Internet Society’s Deploy360 team hosted ION Toronto in Canada. ION Toronto was co-located with the Canadian ISP Summit, which takes place from 11-13 November 2013. ION Conferences bring network engineers and leading industry experts together to discuss emerging technologies including IPv6, DNSSEC, and Routing Resiliency and Security. Early adopters provide valuable insight into their own deployment experiences and bring participants up to speed on new standards emerging from the IETF. Speakers included Dan York, Glenn McKnight, and James Galvin. ION Toronto was webcast live via YouTube, available via both IPv4 and IPv6. Video is below.
On Tuesday November 5 2013, at 11:45am PST the Internet Society presented a briefing – IPv6 — What Does Success Look Like? at IETF 88 in Vancouver, Canada. The briefing took the form of a panel, moderated by Internet Society Chief Internet Technical Officer Leslie Daigle, comprising John Brzozowski, Comcast Cable; Erik Nordmark, Arista; and Chris Palmer, Microsoft. The purpose of this panel was to review recent progress in IPv6 deployment, and begin to address the question of what “good” looks like for IPv6. It was webcast live by Internet Society’s Deploy 360 team. Video is below. The action starts at 2:59.
Today, September 30 2013, the Internet Society’s Deploy360 team will be hosting ION Kraków in Poland. As usual at ION events, this will be a serious workshop on implementing IPv6, DNSSEC, and network resilience. What’s special about this one is that it is the first time an ISOC event has ever been webcast in IPv6 as well as IPv4. This isn’t possible using the Internet Society livestream servers, so team member Dan York will use a Google Hang Out On-Air. As this is experimental he is asking that those of us on IPv6 networks give feedback on its efficacy. Whether accessed via v4 or v6, the webcast should be good viewing – ION Kraków has a great line up of speakers, including Marcin Cieślak of ISOC Poland.
The IPv6 Hackers list was created in August 2011 to provide a forum for IPv6 professionals to discuss low-level IPv6 networking and security issues that could eventually lead to advances and improvements. In July 2013 they held their first ever F2F meeting during IETF 87 in Berlin. Dan York of the Internet Society’s Deploy 360 team shot video.
On Wednesday April 17 2013 the Internet Society’s Colorado Chapter (CO ISOC) will host INET Denver: IPv4 Exhaustion and the Path to IPv6. Co-located with the 2013 North American IPv6 Summit INET Denver will be an opportunity to learn the latest on IPv4 exhaustion and how to transition to IPv6. The INET Denver agenda will bring together top experts in the networking field to discuss the latest on IPv4 exhaustion in our market, and the TCO of IPv6. It will be webcast live by the Internet Society North America Bureau. No live captions. 3pm-8pm New York time.
On Thursday March 28 2013 the Internet Society’s Deploy360 Programme will present ION Singapore, co-located with the ICT Business Summit 2013. A remarkable line up of speakers has been assembled. As usual ION will provide high-level discussion and technical information related to IPv6, DNSSEC, and Secure Routing. Less usually, this one will be also webcast live via the Internet Society livestream channel. It’s a great opportunity to catch up on the latest developments in these vital aspects of Internet development and security. No registration is required to watch the webcast. While it does start at 2am NYC time, it will be instantly archived.
The 86th meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is underway March 10 – 15, 2013, in Orlando, Florida. As usual the Internet Society has published a Rough Guide to topics of particular interest to members. At this IETF meeting, we are focusing our attention to the following broad categories:
Trust technologies; Authentication/Authorization; Infrastructure/Support; IPv6; Bandwidth. Notable sessions include the FCC’s Chief technolgist addressing the demise of POTS, an ISOC session on content (see separate post), and an IAB post-WCIT discussion.
Tomorrow, Tuesday January 15, 2013, American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) CEO JohnCurran will present a webinar “Ready or Not … IPv6 is Here” aimed primarily at business. It starts at 2pm EST (1900 UTC).
We have reached a critical point in the future of the Internet. IPv4 addresses have now fully depleted from the IANA free pool, and two out of five Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) have already reach their final inventories of IPv4 address space, including the Asia-Pacific and European regions. ARIN, the RIR that manages the distrubtion of IP addresses in Canada, the US, and parts of the Caribbean, could face IPv4 depletion soon as well. It is imperative that companies adopt the next generation of Internet Protocol, IPv6, before time runs out and the global Internet community is fragmented. In order to avoid potential operability issues later, organizations everywhere are encouraged begin IPv6 adoption now, as consumers will start to expect IPv6 enabled websites.
In this webinar, John Curran will describe the business case for adopting IPv6, the steps enterprises should already be taking to prepare for post-IPv4 depletion challenges, and how to get IPv6 address space from ARIN. He will also review regional and global IPv4 depletion and IPv6 adoption statistics, address allocation trends, and the IPv6 educational resources available to help hosting companies and other network operators prepare.
On Friday January 4 2013, Susan Hamlin, Director, Communications and Member Services at ARIN guested on the weekly Internet Society Members Hangout (North American Bureau). Susan talked about her work at ARIN, their policy development process, their upcoming events in 2013, and the IPv4 depletion scenario. This video is captioned.
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