At 2:02 PM +0200 7/25/07, David Conrad wrote:
This assumes consumption patterns remain the same which is, I believe, naive. In a world where you have to pay non-trivial amounts for address space utilization, people will only use the address space they actually need and you'll see even more proliferation of NAT for client-only services.
I believe that we'll see extensive use of NAT for client-only services (just look at many broadband residential services today), but that won't help business customers who want a block for the DMZ servers. They'll pay, but the question is whether they can afford the actual global cost of routing table entry, or whether it will even be accountable. ISP's can figure out the cost of "obtaining" IPv4 blocks, but the imputed cost of injecting these random blocks into the DFZ routing table is harder to measure and inflicted on everyone else. /John