|
|
|
|
|
by Dylan16807
349 days ago
|
|
Let's back up a step. You said by definition a whitelist system would consider every IPv6 suspicious (until it's put on the list, presumably). What is that definition? If "applies only to IPv6" is an optional decision someone could make, then it's not part of the definition of a whitelist system for IPs, right? |
|
The prior comment was responding directly to your comment, not any comment preceding that.
Of course it’s no longer by definition if you expand the scope beyond an ipv6 whitelist as there are an infinite number of possible whitelists.