(Repost of <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38570370>)
(Repost of <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38570370>)
IPv6 was released in 1998. It had been 21 (!) years since the release of IPv6 and still what you're describing had not been implemented when Tailscale was released in 2019. Who was stopping anyone from doing it then, and who is stopping anyone from doing it now?
It's easy to paint companies as bad actors, especially since they often are, but Google, Cloudflare and Tailscale all became what they are for a reason: they solved a real problem, so people gave them money, or whatever is money-equivalent, like personal data.
If your argument is inverted, it's a kind of inverse accelerationism (decelerationism?) whereby only in making the Internet worse for everyone, the really good solutions can see the light. I don't buy it.
Tailscale is not the reason we're not seeing what you're describing, the immense work involved in creating it is why, and it's only when that immense amount of work becomes slightly less immense that any solution at all emerges. Tailscale for example would probably not exist if they had to invent Wireguard, and the fact that Tailscale now exists has led to Headscale existing, creating yet another springboard in a line of springboards to create "something" like what you describe -- for those willing to put in the time.
The folks who either (a) got in early on the IPv4 address land rush (especially the Western developed countries), or (b) with buckets of money who buy addresses.
If you're India, there probably weren't enough IPv4 address in the first place to handle your population, so you're doing IPv6:
* https://www.google.com/intl/en/ipv6/statistics.html#tab=per-...
Or even if you're in the West, if you're poor (a community Native American ISP):
> We learned a very expensive lesson. 71% of the IPv4 traffic we were supporting was from ROKU devices. 9% coming from DishNetwork & DirectTV satellite tuners, 11% from HomeSecurity cameras and systems, and remaining 9% we replaced extremely outdated Point of Sale(POS) equipment. So we cut ROKU some slack three years ago by spending a little over $300k just to support their devices.
* https://community.roku.com/t5/Features-settings-updates/It-s...
* Discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35047624
IPv4 'wasn't a problem' because the megacorps who generally run things where I'm guessing you're from (the West) were able to solve it in other means… until they can't. T-Mobile US has 120M and a few years ago it turns out that money couldn't solve IPv4-only anymore so they went to IPv6:
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGbxCKAqNUE
IPv6 is not taking off because IPv4 (and NAT/STUN/TURN) is 'better', but rather because (a) inertial, and (b) it 'works' (with enough kludges thrown at it).
I always bring this up and it’s always dismissed because tech people continue to dismiss usability concerns.
Even “small” usability differences can have a huge effect on adoption.
Yes, there are ways to configure IPv6 to isolate subnets, separate local traffic from internet traffic, set up firewalls and DMZs, run local DNS, etc., but they're all more complicated to configure and administer than their IPv4 equivalents.
For the love of expletive this mistaken belief needs to have died yesterday. NAT boxes help primarily because they also contain a firewall. But most of 2024's network security problems originate from the devices behind your firewall getting exploited through their on requests, not some random shit connecting from the outside. (Yes, that does still happen, so you keep your firewall.)
> no distinction between a local IP and a public IP
That is Survivor Bias at its best.
The originate _inside_ because NAT effectively blocks all _external_ requests.
You mean the firewall effectively blocks all external requests.
The reason NAT works for this is because by default there are no Internet-accessible services available via the router. If a request is received by the router that doesn't match an open port, its OS will, by default, reject it, with no firewall required.
NAT is not required for any of the things you’re talking about.
what happens with an incoming packet if there are no firewall rules on the NAT gateway/middlebox? without having a corresponding conntrack entry they will be dropped (and maybe even an ICMP message sent back, depending on the protocol), no?
for example if there is an incoming TCP packet with a 4-tuple (src ip, src port, dst ip, dst port) ... by necessity "dst ip" is the public IP of the NAT box, and on a pure NAT box there are no bound listening sockets. so whatever "dst port" is .. unless it gets picked up by an established NAT flow ... it will splash on the wall and getting a TCP RST.
isn't the argument that "NAT is not required", but that "NAT is implicitly a firewall"?