On Tue, Jun 05, 2012 at 05:24:27PM +0200, [email protected] 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 while as well. I should have it on cable modem at home this year or next. Mass rollout has begun, actually. Don't forget mobile applications, especially in the developing world. > > 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 are probable a lot people who want > to serve, and who are using the bridge/relay bundle, but unable to activate > the port forwarding. Be it because of technical limitations, because of bugs > (upnp not working) or because of lack of knowledge/motivation to do it. > > > Is Tor IPv6 ready? > > Someone else has to answer about the current status. > https://bridges.torproject.org/ has at the bottom some info about IPv6. I think it would be good to have alpha support for IPv6 by next year or so. _______________________________________________ tor-talk mailing list [email protected] https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-talk
