Nothing is random... or is it?! (week 8)
That moment when you know there has to be something more,
but you can’t quite put your finger on it… that is the moment I just had. So, a
lot of us know that Ipv6 are unique addresses assigned to devices that are
connected to the internet. The unique address that contains the network and the
host address, I was under the assumption that the IP address was randomly
generated from your internet service provider. While it does technically come
from your ISP, it’s not just a ‘made on the spot’ number that they put together.
There is actually a hierarchy to this!
At the top of the IP address hierarchy is the Internet
Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) and are the ones that send large amounts of
addresses to Regional Internet Registries. The RIRs are then responsible for
distributing them to Local internet Registries (this would be your ISP). Now
that your ISP has a selection of usable IP addresses, they can then select any
of the ones from their pool of addresses and provide it to the end-user.
While the end-user (you) is technically assigned a network
IP address at random, just know that before it got to you, it when through several
allocation processes!
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