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Internet's IPv4 address system reaches 4.2 b limit | Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4), which allows onnectivity of computers on the internet, has hit its limit after 30 years of rapid growth, forcing major changes to the technology that has driven the information revolution. The addressing system allowed for more than 4.2 billion addresses, but RIPE NCC, the consortium of internet organisations that oversees the system
in Europe, said it had used the last block of 16.8 million addresses. "When the Internet was first designed it seemed highly unlikely that IP address space would
ever be an issue," the Telegraph quoted Axel Pawlik, RIPE NCC's managing director,
as saying. IPv4 was designed to give every computer connected to the Internet,
a unique numerical address, allowing information to find its way from one to another
anywhere in the world. It will now be superceded by IPv6, a new addressing standard
that would offer around 340 trillion unique addresses, the paper said. It will
mean internet service providers (ISPs) and large businesses will need to invest
in new equipment and software, but if all goes according to plan, then most ordinary
users should not notice any difference, it added.
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