[Student Post]
For those that didn’t know, the world is running out of IP Addresses:
 
It
 has been known for some time that the current structure of IP addresses
 is not sufficient for the number of computers/devices
 accessing the internet in future. The current structure of IP 
addresses, known as IPv4, is structured as xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx (e.g. 
192.168.0.1) which limits this number of unique addresses to
4,294,967,296.
With the limit of Ipv4 addresses expected to be exhausted soon and the number of internet connected devices estimated to reach
 22 billion by 2020 (IMS Research) it is clear a new IP standard is required. 
Thankfully
 a group known as the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) has been 
developing IPv6 since the early 90’s which provides
 for 340 undecillon (that’s 340 with 36 zeros) unique addresses. (e.g. 
2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:8a2e:0370:7334).
 However, proliferation of IPv6 
has been slow with Google estimating in 2008 that IPv6 uptake among 
users was less than 1%. The need for replacement and/or updating of some
 hardware and software is partly to blame for
 this slow rate of uptake.
So
 it seems a significant burden has been placed on the IETF to ensure the
 smooth running of the internet through the adoption
 of IPv6. That’s a lot of technical control for how the internet of the 
future is run. Interestingly the IETF is a volunteer organisation with 
no formal membership. Their work is funded by employers of its 
volunteers and sponsors including the US National Security
 Agency (NSA).
               
Questions this raises for me:
-         
If IPv6 is developed through volunteers Is the internet controlled and owned by everyone?
-         
Although ICANN is
no longer US 
Government controlled it seems the IETF may be to some extent. If all 
roads lead to the US is the US government in control of the internet?
Another way of thinking about this issue might be “Who has the deepest level of technical control over how the internet is run?”
 Maybe that’s the IETF.