Re: Hey, SiteFinder is back, again...

From: Christopher Morrow (no email)
Date: Tue Nov 06 2007 - 02:46:08 EST

  • Next message: Ricardo V. Oliveira: "AS-level connectivity survey"

    On 11/5/07, Eliot Lear <> wrote:

    >
    > Cough. So, how much is that NXDOMAIN worth to you?

    So, here's the problem really... NXDOMAIN is being judged as a
    'problem'. It's really only a 'problem' for a small number of
    APPLICATIONS on the Internet. One could even argue that in a
    web-browser the 'is nxdomain a problem' is still up to the browser to
    decide how best to answer the USER of that browser/application. Many,
    many applications expect dns to be the honest broker, to let them know
    if something exists or not and they make their minds up for the upper
    layer protocols accordingly.

    DNS is fundamentally a basic plumbing bit of the Internet. There are
    things built around it operating sanely and according to generally
    accepted standards. Switching a behavior because you believe it to be
    'better' for a large and non-coherent population is guaranteed to
    raise at least your support costs, if not your customer-base's ire.
    Assuming that all the world is a web-browser is at the very least
    naive and at worst wantonly/knowingly destructive/malfeasant.

    MarkA and others have stated: "Just run a cache-resolver on your local
    LAN/HOST/NET", except that's not within the means of
    joe-random-sixpack, nor is it within the abilities of many
    enterprise/SMB folks, talking from experience chatting up misbehaving
    enterprise/banking/SMB customers first hand. What's to keep the ISP
    from answering: provider-server.com when they ask for Yahoo.com or
    Google.com or akamai-deployed-server.com aside from (perhaps) a threat
    of lawyers calling?

    Anyway, hopefully someone gets their head on straight about this
    before other problems arise.

    -Chris


  • Next message: Ricardo V. Oliveira: "AS-level connectivity survey"





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