theoretically there are Unique Local Addresses (ULAs)

http://www.ripe.net/ipv6-address-types/

but i think when ipv6 will be widely used [don't know when:D we got about: 49 
days? hmmm... - https://ipv6.he.net/statistics/ ] "they" want that, that every 
computer must have a public ipv6 address, so that it can be natively accessible 
by the "outside world" [fixme] - so computers must have good firewalls... i 
hope that all the distributions, linux, bsd, everything will come with these 
default firewall settings in the future, to ensure security, e.g.:

http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=UNLPSECr




--- On Sun, 12/26/10, Joe Zeff <j...@zeff.us> wrote:

> From: Joe Zeff <j...@zeff.us>
> Subject: Re: Let's talk about yum and p2p in Fedora
> To: "Community support for Fedora users" <users@lists.fedoraproject.org>
> Date: Sunday, December 26, 2010, 10:28 PM
> On 12/26/2010 02:11 PM, Genes
> MailLists wrote:
> >   I need to read about ipv6 - but can I
> keep (1) with ipv6 ? i.e.
> > machines inside access to internet similar to what
> they have now via
> > firewall/nat ... but no way for those ipv6 addresses
> to be seen SYN'd
> > from outside.
> 
> AIUI, there are IPv6 address ranges designated for
> that.  And, even 
> better, there's no reason that your LAN can't still be on
> IPv4 on a 
> non-routable range while you're router's on IPv6 to the
> rest of the world.
> -- 
> users mailing list
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