Tomorrow (June 6) IPv6 is officially out there.
What will this do to our privacy?
Is there a way to go 100% private from day 1? I kinda know the answer,
though i'm hoping for a few good ideas.
What are the pros and cons of IPv6 regarding our privacy?
Is Tor IPv6 ready?
> Tomorrow (June 6) IPv6 is officially out there.
And will still take years until most ISPs in most countries offer it.
> What are the pros and cons of IPv6 regarding our privacy?
Hosting bridges and relays will be easier, because less people are behind NAT.
I hope for some more servers, there
On Tue, Jun 05, 2012 at 05:24:27PM +0200, pro...@secure-mail.biz wrote:
> > Tomorrow (June 6) IPv6 is officially out there.
>
> And will still take years until most ISPs in most countries offer it.
I've had IPv6 at the co-lo for a year or two. Our fallback ADSL
line at work has had IPv6 for a whi
My ISP is offering IPv6 since 2002 (higly experemental back then) and
now ipv6 will be officially be sold.
on top of this there is now glassfiber being rolled out and it will
probably have IPv6 by default.
This kinda forces people to use it, it costs less then DSL and has a
higher speed, so you ha
Tor 0.2.3.16-alpha introduces a workaround for a critical renegotiation
bug in OpenSSL 1.0.1 (where 20% of the Tor network can't talk to itself
currently). It also fixes a variety of smaller bugs and other cleanups
that get us closer to a release candidate.
The workaround for the OpenSSL bug will