John A. Leuenhagen via Gnupg-users wrote: > On Thu, Oct 08, 2020 at 12:27:24AM +0200, Stefan Claas wrote: > > Regarding the Internet as of today and Al Gores vision and the Internet > > commerce etc. > > > > I always wondered why it is not possible for me and probably many other > > people to not get a *static* IPv6 address additionally when you sign up > > as private individual at an ISP of your choice? > > > > People could use as usual still common IPv4 for their regular surfing etc. > > but had then the ability, with a static IPv6 address to run their own > > email server and other services from home with a little Raspberry Pi etc., > > without purchasing a VPS plan, thus one would only need to register a > > domain of choice and the records management could also bee done a) with > > the Domain Registrar or your local ISP, instead of the VPS hosting provider. > > Certainly it would be preferable to have a static IPv6 address for that > sort of thing, but it's still quite simple to run services from home by > using dynamic DNS. I'm able to have ddclient run on my router, which > will inform my DNS provider (Cloudflare) of any changes to my dynamic > IPv4 address. Sure, during the occasional change to my address, my > services might go down for a minute or two. For me at least, that's not > the end of the world.
Well, yes and no. I run many years ago with a dynamic IP address services too and had a domain with no-ip.com. But nowadays if you like to run a mail server you will need a static IP address, because if it would be dynamic your are considered as spammer, due to black listing of dynamic IP address ranges. Regards Stefan -- NaClbox: cc5c5f846c661343745772156a7751a5eb34d3e83d84b7d6884e507e105fd675 The computer helps us to solve problems, we did not have without him. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users