Hi,
On 07/10/2013 06:38 PM, Fernando Lozano wrote:
Bottom line: you won't use IPv6 because it's better. We may find out
in
the future it's actually much worse, but we will only know when it's
as
widely use as IPv4. We all know IPv6 is inevitable given the
expansion
of the Internet, but IPv6 is not need by most right now. Maybe we'll
end up with a "different" IPv6, like current IPv4 with CIDR and NAT
is
very different than the original class-based IPv4.
IPv4 works as well as it does because we've had decades to work out
the
bugs and find the best way to make use of it. Eventually, we'll all
be
using IPv6, but unless there are people out there now, using it,
(even
if parts of the path are IPv4) we're never going to find any of the
bugs
or sub-optimal design decisions.
And while we work out IPv6 and improve it, all users should be
vulnerable to current IPv6 problems? Are they supposed to be guinea pigs
for ipv6 development?
Fedora users in particular, including developers who are not concerned
with network apps, and junior sysadmins who have Fedora as a learning
tool, should be exposed to current IPv6 vulnerabilities?
The same way Fedora users get SELinux active by default, and iptables
firewall rules, all in the name of security, they should *not* have IPv6
enabled by default. Those who wish to learn about and contribute to
improve IPv6 could enable the feature themselves, not the other way, as
it is the default for Fedora today.
See you yourself took care of disabling IPv6, but how many computer
users will know they should? And how many Fedora user will know?
Installation defaults should serve the majorty needs, not the IPv6
development agenda.
[]s, Fernando Lozano
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