Last week I had the good fortune to attend Securing, Hacking and Defending IPv6, a class offered by Command Information in Herndon, VA. I've experimented with IPv6, as noted most recently in my May 2007 post Freenet6 on FreeBSD. I thought I knew a decent amount about IPv6, although I recognized a class like this would be helpful.
One word: wow. IPv6 is more complicated than I expected. I only began to realize this as the two Command Information instructors, Joe Klein and TJ Evans, explained what they know about the protocol and how it is used and abused. When IPv6 becomes even moderately deployed, intruders are going to have a field day. The network teams who have been hiding in the shadows of the Web app folks are going to have to step into the light and learn quickly. You can forget any hype about IPv6 bringing "security" when deployed, at least in the short-to-mid-term. The operational realty of designing, building, and running IPv6 networks properly is going to READ MORE
Sponsored by: █ Sparkhost - Hosting Without Compromises! █ Hybrid Performance Web Hosting █ Spark Host Stream Hosting █ Hybrid IRC & IRCd Server Shell Accounts
Command Information Securing, Hacking and Defending IPv6
Started by
Blake
, Dec 22 2008 06:07 AM
No replies to this topic
#1
Posted 22 December 2008 - 06:07 AM
Subscribe To Our RSS Feed For the Latest News from GovernmentSecurity.orgWould you like to earn money posting on GSO?
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users












