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Glossary

What is IPv6?

IPv6 (Internet Protocol version 6) is the next-generation Internet Protocol designed to replace IPv4. Standardized in RFC 8200, it addresses IPv4's exhaustion problem and adds built-in security features.

Key facts:

  • 128-bit addresses — 2¹²⁸ = 340 undecillion (3.4 × 10³⁸) unique addresses
  • Format — eight colon-separated 4-hex-digit groups (e.g. 2001:db8:85a3::8a2e:370:7334)
  • No NAT required — every device can have a globally unique address
  • Built-in IPsec — mandatory security support (though usually used optionally)
  • Adoption — ~45% of Google users access over IPv6 in 2026 (per Google IPv6 stats)

WorldIP.io currently focuses on IPv4; full IPv6 support is on the roadmap. Compare the two protocols.

More IPv4 terms

Look it up in the real world

WorldIP.io tracks every allocated IPv4 address, ASN, CIDR block, and organization on the Internet. Start exploring:

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