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Subject: [IP] Perspective on Root Server Attack
Bob has a point -----Original Message----- From: Bob Frankston <[mailto:rmfXIX-II-OE@bobf.Frankston.com]> Sent: Friday, October 25, 2002 3:57 PM To: dave@farber.net Subject: Re: <[IP]> Perspective on Root Server Attack Perhaps I'm being naive but I have the opposite view. The strength of the system is due to the ineffectiveness of ICANN and the ability of the server managers to take different approaches to resilience and security. If ICANN were able to impose a monoculture we would be more vulnerable and, worse, it would be easier to impose social policy onto the plumping of the Internet. The use of commercial identifiers instead of stable handles in the DNS is a good (or very bad) example of what happens when we confuse technology with social policies that presume there is always a way to cut the baby in half. Most of the anti-ICANN efforts seem focused more on increasing the entanglement which makes it harder to distribute the root services because of the complexity of maintaining the .COM fantasy and the attempts to make it work. My latest dotDNS proposal is at http://www.frankston.com/public/Writing.asp?item=Essays/dotDNS.html The goal should be to make ICANN uninteresting rather than assuming that if we just elected the right people ICANN would do the right thing whatever that is. ------------------------------------- Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/
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