You were warned| www.theregister.com
The plan is to keep the world at bay by never recording it in the DNS root – like many already do with a subdomain for an intranet| www.theregister.com
Beijing set big targets for next-gen networks, but adoption stats suggest it's falling short| www.theregister.com
Asian internet registry still has 5M 32-bit addresses from different sources – or practically infinite IPv6s| www.theregister.com
Perhaps that'll focus your minds on speeding up your adoption of IPv6, eh?| www.theregister.com
Who is behind this lobby group calling for a stock market of-sorts for network resources?| www.theregister.com
linux-kernel.vger.kernel.org archive mirror| lore.kernel.org
In this article we use data from RIPE Atlas probes to investigate the usage of 240/4, a block of IPv4 addresses 'reserved for future use', formally known as Class E in the wild.| RIPE Labs
This document directs the IANA to designate the block of IPv4 addresses from 240.0.0.0 to 255.255.255.255 (240.0.0.0/4) as unicast address space for Private Use.| IETF Datatracker
This memo reclassifies the address block 240.0.0.0/4 as usable address space. While the community has not concluded whether the block should be considered public or private, given the current consumption rate, it is clear that the block should not be left unused. This document also makes several recommendations on ways that current implementations of the IP protocol stack will need to be modified to make this address space usable.| IETF Datatracker
This document redesignates 240/4, the region of the IPv4 address space historically known as "Experimental," "Future Use," or "Class E" address space, so that this space is no longer reserved. It asks implementers to make addresses in this range fully usable for unicast use on the Internet.| IETF Datatracker