Indeed. But .. if you had it in use for ie. 2 years and you do not
use fido anymore and you forget about it or your IPv6 has been
changed cause sometimes that happens and you forget about your DNS..
than your DNS has an advertised IPv6 but does not work anymore as you
are unaware that your IPv6 has been changed.
What do you mean by "points to A" in this context?
I doubt that the use of those very old routers that do not have a
firewall and have it reject all unsilliced income is more that a very
few exceptions. IIRC they are over two decades old.
IPv6 is still niche ..
I disagree. While it is not yet the dominant protocol, it hovers just under 50% global use. It is not a niche.
so it would not directly be available on OLD routers. Mainly they
only do support IPv4 (been there done that as OEM/ODM
manufacturer for end-user consumer market)
How long ago was that?
The vast majority of consumers use a router from their provider and
the vast majority of those routers support IPv6 and have it enabled by default. Your provider's router certainly does.
Indeed. But .. if you had it in use for ie. 2 years and you do not
use fido anymore and you forget about it or your IPv6 has been
changed cause sometimes that happens and you forget about your
DNS.. than your DNS has an advertised IPv6 but does not work
anymore as you are unaware that your IPv6 has been changed.
This sounds much more plausible, then. IPv6 could have been configured
at one point (as you say), and then they bought a new router, or
anything that could cause their IPv6 address to change, and never
realized to change their DNS settings.
I doubt that the use of those very old routers that do not have a
firewall and have it reject all unsilliced income is more that a
very few exceptions. IIRC they are over two decades old.
I rocked an Asus AC68U up until only a few years ago. I'm fairly
certain with the default firmware on that router you could enable
IPv6, but you couldn't configure anything to do with it. It may have
even warned you that enabling it would open it completely to the
public. Of course, when I originally realized that I changed firmware, until it ran it's course and I eventually upgraded to an AX88U Pro.
I rocked an Asus AC68U up until only a few years ago. I'm fairly
certain with the default firmware on that router you could enable
IPv6, but you couldn't configure anything to do with it. It may have
even warned you that enabling it would open it completely to the
public. Of course, when I originally realized that I changed firmware,
until it ran it's course and I eventually upgraded to an AX88U Pro.
Bottom line: That router without a firewall is no longer is use.
Bottom line: That router without a firewall is no longer is use.
Correct, in my case. But how many others out there might still be
using a router like that. If they aren't broken (in their eyes), many don't bother upgrading until they absolutely have to.
I have 3 in my list of IPv6 nodes.
10 2:280/5006 Kees van Eeten Native KPN f INO4
61 2:460/5858 Stas Mishchenkov Native KCT/he.net f INO4
71 2:221/10 Tommi Koivula Native Hetzner f INO4
Who is number 4?
I have 3 in my list of IPv6 nodes.
10 2:280/5006 Kees van Eeten Native KPN f INO4
61 2:460/5858 Stas Mishchenkov Native KCT/he.net f INO4
71 2:221/10 Tommi Koivula Native Hetzner f INO4
Who is number 4?
There is a strong candidate in Sweden...
address: 2:203/0@fidonet
address: 2:20/0@fidonet
address: 2:2/2@fidonet
address: 2:203/2@fidonet
OPT EXTCMD
2001:9b1:10d:77::52b - Ok.
Session with 2:20/0 done.
Calling 2:20/0 (94.254.14.141:24555)
error (Connection timed out)
| Sysop: | Daphantom |
|---|---|
| Location: | Washington, IL. |
| Users: | 5 |
| Nodes: | 4 (0 / 4) |
| Uptime: | 91:42:00 |
| Calls: | 26 |
| Files: | 21,932 |
| D/L today: |
3 files (541K bytes) |
| Messages: | 25,265 |