Message Systems, the industry leader in messaging technology solutions,
is greeting World IPv6 Day with a roadmap for maintaining a safe and
secure messaging environment as Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and
the email industry begin the transition to the IPv6 Internet address
standard. In “Managing
Reputation In An IPv6 World,” a new white paper, Alec Peterson,
Message Systems VP of Technical Services, and Robert Marchi, Senior
Solutions Architect at anti-abuse application partner eleven,
propose a novel approach by which ISPs can continue to track subscriber
reputation as a means to effectively combat abuse and filter spam.
As Internet Service Providers (ISP) prepare to deploy IPv6, some
industry observers have expressed concern that this new standard will
impact defenses against messaging abuse. IP reputation has long been a
critical element in the defense against abuse with many mailbox
providers opting to limit or refuse traffic based on it. Yet
conventional approaches to IP reputation tracking will be rendered
unworkable as IPv6 expands the Internet address space from 4 billion
addresses to an almost incomprehensible 3.4 * 10^38 addresses. This new
white paper proposes specific methodologies for tracking reputation in
the IPv6 environment by mapping IP prefixes to subscribers, rather than
mapping complete addresses to subscribers. While making no claims as the
exclusive approach to managing IPv6 reputation, the paper does serve as
a starting point to prompt industry dialogue on this critical issue.
“Recent statements in the media that reputation based on IPv6 addresses
will be ‘impossible’ due to the sheer volume of available address space
are alarmist and regrettable. What we’ve put forth in this white paper
is a workable framework that demonstrates that IP reputation is not just
possible with IPv6, but actually quite achievable,” said George
Schlossnagle, Chief Executive Officer for Message Systems. “Our position
at Message Systems is that reputation tracking in the emerging IPv6
environment can and must be done. This paper provides concrete
suggestions on how to do so, and we look forward to engaging with
clients, partners and industry colleagues on these suggestions in the
months ahead.”
“With IPv4 reputation tracking, one subscriber equals, roughly, one IP
address,” explains Peterson. “IPv6 obviously breaks that model, but
ultimately there still will be one IPv6 prefix assigned to a single
subscriber. Thus, the challenge becomes how to move from a model that
maps a single IP address to a subscriber, to one that maps an IP prefix
to a subscriber. This means considering all IP addresses within a given
range of addresses together as one, as opposed to the current simplistic
mechanism of considering each IP address individually with no
aggregation of results. We’re proposing that this kind of IP address
aggregation should form the basis of IP reputation tracking in the
emerging IPv6 environment.”
There is no set timeline for the implementation of IPv6, yet recent
events have accelerated the momentum toward adoption. In February, the
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) announced
that the last group of IPv4 addresses had been assigned. Also, in late
2010 the Obama administration directed all federal agencies in the U.S.
to upgrade external-facing services to "operationally use native IPv6"
by the end of fiscal year 2012. Further guidelines will require federal
agencies to upgrade network systems and applications that link to public
servers to support native IPv6 by the end of fiscal year 2014. While
legacy IPv4 addresses will continue to be commercially available for
some time to come, most industry observers agree that the exhaustion of
the first-generation address pool, combined with the extraordinarily
fast growth of IP devices, will hasten adoption of IPv6.
World IPv6 Day, taking place June 8th, is an event sponsored
by the Internet Society, and will involve many of the Internet’s largest
search engines, content providers and ISPs in a 24-hour test of the IPv6
readiness. Message Systems has long advocated IPv6 adoption, and the
company’s solutions are fully IPv6-enabled. The Message Systems Momentum
platform, the industry’s only true message management platform, affords
the high performance, flexible and extensible technology framework
required by ISPs and carriers for implementing a successful
reputation-tracking strategy in the emerging IPv6 environment.
About Message Systems
The industry leader in messaging technology, Message Systems offers a
family of software solutions and services that addresses the digital
communications needs of today’s most innovative companies.
Telecommunications carriers, ISPs, marketing services providers, cloud
computing firms and social media companies rely on Message Systems
software to power the message-based communications driving their
critical business initiatives. Message Systems solutions get billions of
unique messages to the right place at the right time every day through
the full range of channels: email, SMS text, MMS messaging and more.
Founded in 1997, the company is headquartered in Columbia, Maryland. For
more information, go to http://www.messagesystems.com
or call 877.887.3031
