Re: Sitefinder II, the sequel...

From: Christopher L. Morrow (no email)
Date: Thu Jul 13 2006 - 10:48:06 EDT

  • Next message: Patrick W. Gilmore: "Re: Sitefinder II, the sequel..."

    On Thu, 13 Jul 2006, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:

    >
    > That said, no one has yet said why it is necessary, or even
    > desirable, to have a completely homogenous view of the world.
    >

    I'd use one example reason of why: "Customer Service issues"

    So If grandma Jane goes to fobar.com (which gets
    corrected/redirected/blah) to foobar.com and sees some content she really
    likes she may tell grandma June. Grandma June goes to fobar.com and gets
    the IE error message saying 'site does not exist. She calls her ISP to
    find out why the site is down.

    This is a very oversimplified example, I admit. It does show a simple
    example though of inconsistency and why that could be 'bad' or atleast
    problematic. (It might also argue for universal adoption of this
    technology, which I still 'just dont like', which also might be the crazy
    pills)

    In general inconsistency is troubling to folks, I think, and in recursive
    DNS it's especially difficult to see as 'good' since that 'service' is not
    universal (not all owned/operated by one entity). In the case of
    authoritative DNS though, you are (or anyone, not just Patrick) free to
    goof with responses as you (or anyone) see's fit... you are afterall
    'authoritative' for the record. In the recursive land it may be viewed as
    'rude' or 'out of spec' (perhaps this is paul's issue?) to fake answers
    to questions.

    I wonder about performance and impact and the legittimacy of replying to a
    'typo' that isn't really a 'typo' ? The claims to 'fix phishing' (phishing
    protection) that is doing things like knowing what a phishing name is,
    I presume this works on some list of names currently in use (from
    antiphishing.org for example) Is there a timeout on these entries? What
    about names that are the shared host for lots of users? (members.aol.com
    for instance) There are a host if issues here, simple typo correction
    isn't going to find/solve/know about most of them.

    At the right level of the hierarchy this service certainly could be 'nice'
    (or not objectionable) the choice part is a big 'nice' for the service, I
    admit. I find it hard to believe an enterprise or MSO would offer this
    as a blanket answer though, again crazy-pills might be acting up again
    though.

    -chris


  • Next message: Patrick W. Gilmore: "Re: Sitefinder II, the sequel..."





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