I don't buy the "enterprise" argument flowing through this discussion:

* What kind of enterprise network are you running where you don't
control the clients and can't disable privacy extensions?

* If you want to make sure nobody uses privacy extensions on your net,
just reject all outgoing connections which do not have the global bit
set on your perimeter firewall. Then people will call tech support and
you can explain to them that/how they have to disable this feature.

* It is true that enabled privacy extensions make logging harder. But if
you're letting people into your network who have sufficient permissions
to change their network config, they can just configure a static IP
address so you've got to log based on MAC addresses (hoping nobody will
change them) anyway. Rigging up a linux box which runs a daemon sniffing
all traffic and logs the assignment of MAC addresses to IP addresses is
not trivial, but easy. (See previous point if you don't want to build
such a device or your network structure is too complex.)

OTOH does IPv6 allow tracking people much more and easier than
fingerprinting allows. While it is true that you can fingerprint
browsers, is the implementation of such a fingerprinting device a lot
more complicated than a simple log file. Additionally does (rather
exact) fingerprinting only allow browser identification; with the MAC
address all other protocols (P2P, ...) are traceable, too.

There's actually currently some discussion about IPv6 and privacy in
German media, see eg. <http://www.h-online.com/security/news/item/IPv6
-Smartphones-compromise-users-privacy-1169708.html> (and the longer
article <http://www.heise.de/ct/inhalt/2011/03/146/>) and
<http://www.netzpolitik.org/2011/leseempfehlungen-datenschutz-im-
zeitalter-von-ipv6/> (in the comments of the latter post Lutz
Donnerhacke promises an article on why IPv6 is *not* an issue for
privacy, let's hope he'll shed some light on the topic).

Anyway, my preference is *for* privacy extensions enabled per default
since they do improve privacy for the home user who walks into an
IPv6-enabled network (and uses Ubuntu and not Windows...) and enterprise
networks should have the means to either disable them or log the MAC
addresses.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/176125

Title:
  Ubuntu should activate the IPv6 privacy extension by default (echo 2
  >/proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/all/use_tempaddr)

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