When IPv4 was standardized in the early 1980s, its designers chose a 32-bit address space, allowing for roughly 4.3 billion unique addresses. At the time, the internet was a research network with only ...
Organizations slow to adopt IPv6 take heed: Surging requests for IPv4 addresses are quickly drying up the available store, raising the specter of an IPv4 black market that could dramatically increase ...
The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) has handed out its last IPv4 addresses, leaving the remaining blocks to regional registries that in some cases may exhaust them within a few months. The ...
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