Keep in mind that IPv6 has IPSec VPN built into the protocol. It doesn't need 
to be in the router. 

Unlike IPv4, where the IPSec VPN protocol is an add-on, optional service, with 
IPv6 it's built into every device, because IPsec is a mandatory component for 
IPv6, and therefore, the IPsec security model is required to be supported for 
all IPv6 implementations. 

Thus it is a true end-to-end secure transport between two nodes -- even when 
those nodes are behind a firewall. You can still created IPv6 VPNs from 
site-to-site (called "tunnel mode"), but the idea with IPv6 is that since you 
can directly encrypt every TCP session, eventually the need for tunnels will 
diminish, if not go away completely. 

Interestingly, IPsec came out of funding from Clinton administration for 
securely hosting the whitehouse.gov email server. Trusted Information Systems 
software engineer Wei Xu started researching IP security methods in July 1994, 
and ultimately developed the first rendition of IPSec. He ported it to several 
server OSes of the time. 

 -mel beckman

> On Oct 4, 2015, at 6:41 AM, Matthias Leisi <matth...@leisi.net> wrote:
> 
> The built-in VPN which only supports IPv4 (that one specifically on an Asus 
> router).

Reply via email to