RE: Sitefinder II, the sequel...

From: Daniel Golding (no email)
Date: Tue Jul 11 2006 - 15:22:08 EDT

  • Next message: Randy Bush: "(2nd) Call for Volunteers for Mailing List Administration Panel"

    That's absolutely ridiculous. Enterprise IT organizations make decisions on
    behalf of their userbase all day. Frankly, I'd be shocked if many tried this
    out - most enterprises run their own DNS servers as part of an Active
    Directory scheme. In any case, those workstations belong to the enterprise
    and they can point them to whatever DNS servers they want.

    For most end-users, their Internet access provider already selects their DNS
    caching server. ISPs are within their rights to do this - I'm surprised most
    broadband ISPs haven't done exactly what OpenDNS is doing to generate
    revenue.

    I'm sure if you look really hard, you can find something else to be outraged
    about. OpenDNS isn't it. I'm at a loss to explain why people are trying so
    hard to condemn something like this.

    - Daniel Golding

    > -----Original Message-----
    > From: [mailto:] On Behalf Of
    > Stephane Bortzmeyer
    > Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2006 3:09 AM
    > To: Steve Sobol
    > Cc: Joseph Jackson;
    > Subject: Re: Sitefinder II, the sequel...
    >
    >
    > On Mon, Jul 10, 2006 at 11:19:51PM -0700,
    > Steve Sobol <> wrote
    > a message of 16 lines which said:
    >
    > > There's a big difference, of course, between INTENTIONALLY pointing
    > > your computers at DNS servers that do this kind of thing, and having
    > > it done for you without your knowledge and/or consent.
    >
    > As Steven Bellovin pointed out, most OpenDNS users will not choose it:
    > it will be choosen for them by their corporate IT department or by
    > their Internet access provider.


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