by evilgenius » Wed 13 Sep 2017, 12:09:30
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')Tnx for that evilgenius. Two questions: what is the alternative to asynchronous data transfer? And you mention the registration of "everything" with data servers. But isn't the point to replace data servers?
The alternative is upload speed that is at least adequate for people to conduct business up to a certain size without needing GoDaddy or someone to specially host them, having static addresses associated with their business. Currently, data centers are the things built to handle upload capacity. You wouldn't dream of hosting your business outside of one of them, on your own device, unless you paid a lot of additional money to set up a huge line to your business. Your ISP doesn't want to give that to you for what you pay them to have access in the first place. It's an attitude related to the shortage of addresses under IPV4 which may very well carry over into IPV6. They slant service so that you have a lot of download speed, as a consumer, but not a lot of upload speed, as a provider of content. Really it doesn't matter, except in terms of the kind of personal freedom that many associate with the internet. It's why the cloud is the model for the infrastructure, whatever it winds up being it will all do the job. It's just that, under the current system, to get there you have to pay somebody. You pay with money, or the loss of your personal information.
Domain Name Servers are not the same as having data centers. DNS is how the internet handles traffic. They know the next node likely to refer a packet that is sent, so that it will reach its destination. Under IPV6, if static addressing comes into being at any size, the tables those DNS servers need to refer to inside of them will become very much larger, and they will have to be organized with respect to whom a request for information is directed at, in terms of what ISP a device that has a static address is hosted by. It should be trivial, but you never know. The ISP's are a greedy bunch and will probably try to segregate people by how much they can afford. They will probably also try to trap customers, so that they can't switch. You could say that the people won't allow that, but the people have never seemed to mind.