Has anyone got any idea about how to trun of the default behaviour of having 
every interface automatically assigned an IPv6 address when it comes up?

So far I've hunted around and around the interwebs, and pushed "0" into all 
sorts of files in /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/*/* all to no avail. The moment I 
bring an interface up an inet6 LLA address is automatically assigned to it.

I'm starting to wonder if Linux is an OS I really want to have anywhere near a 
computer of mine when it seems the designers of it decided it'd be a good idea 
to (by default) automatically open up a connectable address on every single 
nertwork interface, of every single device, without any consideration for 
whether an interface was protected or not.

I mean I've seen many utterly ridiculous decisions in my time in this industry, 
but I never thought I'd see one which left nearly every single linux system 
(all those where ip6tables hasn't been explicitly invoked anyway) vulnerable to 
attack (even if only from another system on the local network). Utter madness, 
with seemingly no way to disable it.

Any ideas/suggestions welcomed.


Thanks
Dave
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