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Yes, that's correct -- I'm in the USA, and not in Europe or Africa. What is your point with this? ARIN has, of course, delegated my assigned IPv6 network to my ISP; you do realize that this is SOP for ARIN?



The point was a prefix from 2600::/16 isn’t special; it’s just from one of the blocks assigned to ARIN. One ISP I know of with an allocation in that range is Verizon, which announces a number of prefixes over BGP in 2600:1000::/24


Uhm, anyone with an ISP in the United States is going to have a block delegated from ARIN. That's the whole point of ARIN, isn't it? Nothing they delegate is inherently special, because ARIN administers all of the allocations for their region.

I'm saying that perhaps the 2600::/16 delegation is especially reserved for a certain class of user in order to tag us as something. Surely, my own ISP holds more delegations than that slice alone. It's certainly standing out like a sore thumb to anyone analyzing logs. As I said, it can't be merely a coincidence.

Interestingly, I also subscribe to mobile voice/data service from the same ISP, and activating mobile data here at home gives me, sure enough, another 2600::* delegation.


It's not being used to tag you. ARIN just happen to have 2600::/12 and various US ISPs got allocations from the beginning of it, which they use.


It's the address range used for the microchips in the vaccines.




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