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by globular-toast
2014 days ago
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That's surprising and quite concerning. Imagine all the insecure IoT devices running ancient software having a direct connection to the Internet... It would be even more concerning if they were shipping routers without any firewall functionality at all. NAT basically requires a firewall. I hope the thinking isn't if you can do away with NAT you can do away with the firewall. |
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-IPv6 is fundamentally much more secure than IPv4 (no scanning, etc.)
-opt-out is bad for innovation, especially since the cheap default ISP router firewall software is likely to not even allow opt-out for any other protocols than TCP and UDP. (Heck, these days on IPv4 even anything different than HTTPS can be problematic...)
-reliance on router firewalls is bad because they incentivize sloppy device security - the manufacturers should be instead liable when they are at fault for screwing it up (also, how many of these "insecure IoT devices running ancient software" are even able to run IPv6 ?)
source : https://lafibre.info/ipv6/ipv6-le-firewall/msg704095/#msg704... (fr)
Incidentally, one of the "big 4" French ISPs "Free" didn't even have an IPv6 firewall on its customers routers between 2008 and 2019, and it's probably still opt-in : 4 months ago : https://fr.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=202008121107... (fr)
So I guess that we're going to see in practice the problems that having no IPv6 firewall causes (most customers not having any idea about what even is a firewall) as it gets more popular... and since Free this summer boasted about reaching 99% IPv6 coverage, and is enabled by default, and can NOT be disabled...