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by general1465 67 days ago
So you actually agree with me, that making all addresses public was stupid to begin with. It was stupid on IPv4 and it remain stupid on IPv6, yet we already have experience from IPv4 that it was stupid.
1 comments

> So you actually agree with me, that making all addresses public was stupid to begin with.

If an address is not public how can you start an connection from it, or end a connection at it? A web server needs a public address if you want to have people reach it. And you, at some point, also have to have a public address if you want to connect to pubic services: either on your end-host, at your CPE/router's WAN interface, or on an interface of your ISP's CG-NAT box.

But having a public address on your end-host also allows for much more functionality than if you were stuck behind CPE-NAT or CG-NAT. Now, you don't have to use this functionality—just like how I didn't when my printer gets an publicly addressable (but not publicly reachable) IPv6 address—but it opens up various possibilities.

So having all devices on public addresses was stupid to begin with on IPv4 and it was arrogantly stupid on IPv6.
The fact that we are giving IP addresses an hierarchy is stupid. If you don't want outsiders to connect to your device use a firewall.
Or use NAT, which is actually better solution, because misconfigured NAT won't expose your whole network, while misconfigured firewall will.
Well, actually it will. In fact, even correctly configured NAT won't stop connections into your network.

On top of that, it lulls you into a false sense of security, so you confidently think it's protecting you even when it isn't. At least not having NAT makes the actual state of your network clearer.

> even correctly configured NAT won't stop connections into your network.

Yeah that's called port forwarding. It is like complaining that light is coming into your house through windows. Fully intentional.

> So having all devices on public addresses was stupid to begin with on IPv4 and it was arrogantly stupid on IPv6.

"Yeah? Well, you know, that's just like uh, your opinion, man." — The Dude

Publicly addressable ≠ publicly reachable.

When I was with my last ISP which had IPv6, my printer had a public address, but the only people who could reach it were those on my home network.

With this logic, my printer can be reachable on google.com, but only from my private network, does not turn my printer into Google.