The big websites are operating on ipv6. If you want to run your own website it’s actually trivial to host it on both ipv4/ipv6 now and most good hosting providers will give you a /64 allocation.
In the UK broadband providers also are quite commonly providing IPv6 as standard (albeit the scummy ones dynamically assign a prefix, for absolutely zero reason aside from annoyance). My provider uses PD to assign a /48 even.
So, really not sure why it’s so slow going elsewhere. There’s really no reason for it now in 2025.
Or by that point they will have created a self scaling system
At the rate IPv6 adoption is going, I wouldn’t get my hopes up.
They will implemented 20 layers of NAT
The big websites are operating on ipv6. If you want to run your own website it’s actually trivial to host it on both ipv4/ipv6 now and most good hosting providers will give you a /64 allocation.
In the UK broadband providers also are quite commonly providing IPv6 as standard (albeit the scummy ones dynamically assign a prefix, for absolutely zero reason aside from annoyance). My provider uses PD to assign a /48 even.
So, really not sure why it’s so slow going elsewhere. There’s really no reason for it now in 2025.