> Wouldn't such packets be considered bogons and get blocked (either via
> specific filters for fc00::/7 or uRPF) at the edge of your network before
> the server even saw them?

right up to the point where they fill one of my peering circuits, yes.
after that, i have to track them back to the source and stop them there.

> Besides, ULA (RFC 4193) blocks _can't_ be registered because there is no
> central authority and no guaranteed uniqueness.  ULA-C/G are different
> beasts, and if passed should have WHOIS and RDNS servers.

fortunately then, ULA hasn't caught on.  ULA-C or ULA-G could catch on.

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