I don't remember the source, but I do remember that even with Comcast's deployment, HE still represented the majority of IPv6 traffic in the US. Of course, it could just be a bunch of us heavy IPv6 users. On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 8:03 PM Spencer Ryan <sryan@arbor.net> wrote:
Comcast is near 100% on their DOCSIS network (Busniess and residential). That should be the largest single ISP for IPv6 for end users in the USA.
*Spencer Ryan* | Senior Systems Administrator | sryan@arbor.net *Arbor Networks* +1.734.794.5033 (d) | +1.734.846.2053 (m) www.arbornetworks.com
On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 7:49 PM, Cryptographrix <cryptographrix@gmail.com> wrote:
Depends - how many US users have native IPv6 through their ISPs?
If I remember correctly (I can't find the source at the moment), HE.net represents something like 70% of IPv6 traffic in the US.
And yeah, not doing that - actually in the middle of an IPv6 project at work at the moment that's a bit important to me.
On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 7:45 PM Baldur Norddahl <baldur.norddahl@gmail.com
wrote:
Den 4. jun. 2016 01.26 skrev "Cryptographrix" <cryptographrix@gmail.com :
The information I'm getting from Netflix support now is explicitly
telling
me to turn off IPv6 - someone might want to stop them before they completely kill US IPv6 adoption.
Not allowing he.net tunnels is not killing ipv6. You just need need native ipv6.
On the other hand it would be nice if Netflix would try the other protocol before blocking.