The IPv6 Challenge Closes a Successful Cycle

August 29, 2022

The IPv6 Challenge Closes a Successful Cycle

By Alejandro Acosta, R&D Coordinator at LACNIC

LACNIC’s IPv6 Challenge, an initiative created by the community and supported by the Regional Internet Registry, successfully promoted the IPv6 among business organizations, academia and governments across Latin America and the Caribbean during five years and eleven editions.

Originally designed to acknowledge the work of organizations in the early stages of IPv6 deployment, over its various editions the challenge evolved to become a true challenge for technical staff and professionals looking to implement this protocol in datacenters, existing networks, new deployments, and other applications.

This evolution extended to participants, from participants in the first editions of the Challenge who had not yet implemented IPv6 to participants of subsequent editions who had already embarked on their IPv6 deployment and were seeking to broaden and deepen its scope despite not being members of LACNIC.

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The project leaves us with great satisfaction because of the beautiful nature of its origins and its contribution to IPv6 deployment in the region over the past five years. We are also convinced that it helped bring LACNIC closer to the technical community.

We managed to keep the evaluation committee practically unchanged for five and a half years and achieved a very fluid exchange with participants. We replied to the questions of those who subscribed to the Challenge via email exchanges or webinars on the subject. Truth be told, all of the editions allowed us to have very fruitful exchanges with the participants and meet with them to organize and encourage them to write down and document their work. This led to feedback from and among participants after the conclusion of each edition of the Challenge.

In these five years, more than 400 participants from different countries in the region registered for the IPv6 Challenge, most of them representing the private sector and, in second place, the academic sector.

The views expressed by the authors of this blog are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of LACNIC.