Frankly speaking, one should proxy between "on-air" interfaces and the "Internet/ISP" interface at large. This can still be a 1-to-1 NAT mapping so to keep IP use within a given 44/8 subnet. But utilizing a proxy ensures that you as the network operator and licensed operator have the ability to inspect traffic which when we're talking about public interconnection *is* necessary as you cannot predict what the public in this case will do in terms of reply that may be out-of-bounds for the radio service. This way you can take requests that are HTTPS and by using a MITM proxy or similar, can inspect or encrypt and if needed, re-encode traffic going in and out of the radio interface.
On Thu, Dec 16, 2021 at 8:35 AM Borja Marcos via 44Net < 44net@mailman.ampr.org> wrote:
On 15 Dec 2021, at 22:09, vk2tv via 44Net 44net@mailman.ampr.org
wrote:
(c) intercommunications when participating inemergency services operations or training exercises related to emergency services.
Cool! We don’t have this one and I was actually considering making a proposal to add it.
I can imagine all kind of nefarious consequences if during a serious emergency miscreants can take hold of supplies thanks to communications snooping.
73,
Borja / EA2EKH
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