Dear Working Group,
As more email providers enable Domain Message Authentication Reporting &
Conformance (DMARC), some people find they can no longer receive emails
from the mailing lists they are subscribed to. We have deployed a
Mailman setting change to address this problem.
After consultation with the RIPE Working Group Chairs, we have enabled
the DMARC "Munge From" setting on all RIPE mailing lists. This means
that if your email service provider has DMARC enabled, you will continue
to receive all emails sent to this mailing list, but the "From" part of
the header will change. If you don't have DMARC enabled, you won't see
any change to the emails you receive from this mailing list.
You can find more information about how we have been handling DMARC in
the following RIPE Labs articles:
https://labs.ripe.net/Members/adam_castle/dmarc-and-the-ripe-ncchttps://labs.ripe.net/Members/adam_castle/ripe-mailing-lists-and-dmarc
To ensure all working group participants are aware of the changes, I am
sending this mail to all working groups. If you have any questions or
encounter any issues on this mailing list, please let me know.
Many thanks.
Adam Castle
Web Services Manager
RIPE NCC
Dear colleagues,
This RIPE Labs article by Jacky Hammer covers the topic of whether
different operating systems have correctly implemented RFC 6980
(Security Implications of IPv6 Fragmentation with IPv6 Neighbor Discovery):
https://labs.ripe.net/Members/jacky_hammer/lets-talk-about-rfc-6980
Kind regards,
Mirjam Kühne
RIPE NCC
Dear colleagues,
The choice of the IPv6 address format impacts a host's security and
privacy. This new RIPE Labs article by Johanna Ullrich discusses this
impact, highlights how current address formats deal with matters of
security and privacy, and pinpoints shortcomings in today's addressing
mechanisms:
https://labs.ripe.net/Members/johanna_ullrich/ipv6-addresses-security-and-p…
Kind regards,
Mirjam Kühne
RIPE NCC
Dear colleagues,
I am very happy to invite you to the APNIC's first Hackathon, to be held
from 23 to 25 February 2018 in Kathmandu, Nepal.
What are Hackathons?
--------------------
Hackathons (hacking marathons) are events where a group of people work
together on a pre-defined set of problems, intensively, for a period of
a few days.
At the first APNIC Hackathon, participants will identify and help
resolve IPv6-related challenges of their choice.
Attendance is free but will be limited to 25 participants.
Who should apply
----------------
- Informatics professionals (developers, testers, designers and
so forth)
- Telecommunications professionals (network/telecom engineers,
network administrators/operators and so forth)
- Researchers working on Internet measurements, networking, or
similar projects
- Advanced students of technology degrees
For more information, application form, and key dates, visit the
APRICOT 2018 website:
https://2018.apricot.net/program/hackathon
Participants will also receive an APNIC Hackathon t-shirt, a certificate
of participation, and a chance to win assorted prizes.
For any further queries, please email the Hackathon team at:
conference(a)apnic.net
Regards,
Vesna Manojlovic
Community Builder
RIPE NCC