Also just to be clear VXLAN is an encapsulation layer, not encryption.

You could consider a fair comparison as converting analog audio to a digital mode and then back to analogue.

It is just taking layer 2 packets and wrapping them up into a layer three transport.

Nathan Brookfield
Managing Director

On 18 Oct 2024, at 11:37, Darcy Buskermolen via 44net <44net@mailman.ampr.org> wrote:


If the commercial provider is using RF links where the frequencies are NOT in the amature spectrum space then have at er.  If rhe frequencies are within the amature allocation than the traffic passing over that part of the network shall not be encrypted.



Sent on the go, from somewhere other than here.


-------- Original message --------
From: Dave Koberstein via 44net <44net@mailman.ampr.org>
Date: 2024-10-17 6:22 p.m. (GMT-08:00)
To: KI5PGJ <ki5pgj@placebonol.com>
Cc: Rebecca Key <rebecca@ardc.net>, lleachii--- via 44net <44net@mailman.ampr.org>
Subject: [44net] Re: US encryption question over IPv6 transport

The traffic over the air can't be encrypted. It's ok to encrypt it over other parts of the path that aren't ham radio. 

Is that what you were asking or did I misunderstand?

--
Dave

Sent from my mobile...

On Thu, Oct 17, 2024, 6:12 PM KI5PGJ via 44net <44net@mailman.ampr.org> wrote:
So, I know 44 traffic over wireless has to be unencrypted, however can 44 traffic run over encrypted wireless site to site IPv6 network.  I have access to IPv6 rural Internet wireless provider commercial network, besides fiber to their sites they also have P2P wireless links.  They encrypt their P2P traffic, they run VXLAN over these paths and said they could provide a VLAN where they share an RF site with an amateur repeater.

Thanks

Liz
KI5PGJ
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