Our 20-year-old internet is finally running out of IP addresses

Thursday, February 3rd, 2011 By

transition from ipv4 to ipv6

The transition from 1Pv4 to IPv6 will expand the Internet from the size of a golf ball to the size of the Sun. Image: CC cisco/Wikimedia Commons

Available internet IP addresses are on the verge of running out in the web’s vintage configuration. The International Assigned Numbers Authority, a non-profit group that manages the planet’s inventory of 4.3 billion internet addresses, handed out the last five bundles for distribution worldwide on Thursday. The pending exhaustion of internet IP addresses will facilitate transition to a new Internet protocol waiting in the wings.

The old internet is on its last legs

The last remaining internet IP addresses were handed out Thursday to Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) that distribute them to the world’s geographical domains. This essentially depletes the 4.3 billion locations made available when Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) was created in 1981. But the internet won’t run out of IP addresses for a while. RIRs will lease them to ISPs and wireless carriers and web hosting companies. Some IP addresses are permanently assigned, others are pulled from a stash when routers or smartphones go online. It is generally believed that six to nine months will elapse before there are no more IPv4 addresses left.

The new internet may last forever

Fortunately, the IANA and other groups entrusted with the stewardship of the web saw this day coming. A new system was developed in 1999 called Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6). IPv4 addresses use a 32-bit number and dotted decimal (base-10) notation: 192.149.252.76. IPv6 addresses use 128-bit numbers and letters as well as hexadecimal (base-16) notation: 3FFE:F200:0234:AB00:0123:4567:8901:ABCD. What do the extra numbers and letters mean? The fresh inventory of IP addresses in IPv6 adds up to 340 undecillion–or 340 trillion bundles holding a trillion networks that can each handle a trillion servers, routers, PCs, smartphones, cars, appliances or whatever else becomes connected in the future.

The transition from IPv4 to IPv6

The inevitable transition from IPv4 to IPv6 will probably be painless for the average consumer or business. But it will be a major headache for people deeply involved with the web’s infrastructure, because IPv4 and IPv6 aren’t compatible. Right now, a device connected via IPv4 cannot communicate with a device connected via IPv6. But after the internet created in 1981 finally fills up, IPv4 and IPv6 can coexist. Software and hardware developers have been creating transition technology and the latest operating systems include default support for IPv6. There’s no need to panic. Remember Y2K?

Sources

CNET

CNN

Mashable

Previous Article

« Interest rates on credit cards hit highest point in 13 years

The average interest rate for credit cards is at its highest point in more than a decade. Base rates are being raised thanks to the CARD Act. Visa
Next Article

Top 10 cities with the most credit card debt »

Do you live in one of the top 10 cities in the United States for credit card debt? Access to payday loans could have saved you a bundle. Close up of the logo on a Visa credit card.

Leave a Reply

Other recent posts by Thomas Hart

Find cheap airline tickets with vigilance, technology and luck

To find cheap airline tickets, plan ahead, buy early, check weekly airfare pricing trends and take advantage of technology to find hot deals.
airfare pricing trends

New cars are cheaper than used cars in an upside-down economy

A new car loan could be cheaper than buying used thanks to 0 percent financing and a lower inventory of used vehicles available for sale ...
zero percent financing

Why the Alternative Minimum Tax should be changed by Congress

The AMT was created four decades ago to close loopholes for wealthy taxpayers, but today it places an extra tax burden on the middle class.
middle class amt