computer-science
IPv8
Key takeaways
- IPv8 is a managed network protocol suite that resolves IPv4 exhaustion, unifies network management, and stays 100% backward compatible — no flag day, no forced migration.
- After 25 years of dual-stack effort, IPv6 still carries a minority of global traffic.
- Each ASN holder receives 4,294,967,296 host addresses.
IPv8 is a managed network protocol suite that resolves IPv4 exhaustion, unifies network management, and stays 100% backward compatible — no flag day, no forced migration. Help fund the kernel build and the first reference implementation of the addressing schema.
After 25 years of dual-stack effort, IPv6 still carries a minority of global traffic. IPv8 takes a different bet: ship a coherent management suite first, and make the address upgrade a side-effect of running it.
Each ASN holder receives 4,294,967,296 host addresses. The 64-bit r.r.r.r.n.n.n.n format ends CGNAT-driven scarcity without renumbering anything.
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