hmmm.... Would somebody, preferably a Verisign representative, please attempt to explain again how this new service from Verisign does not detrimentally affect the stability of the Internet?
I mean, we now have administrators of DNS servers everywhere putting whatever they think is appropriate into their configuration and/or zone files, in reaction to Verisign's action.... John Vogel ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ross Wm. Rader" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Adam Selene" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Thursday, September 18, 2003 10:29 AM Subject: Re: Block Verisign's domain > > It would also seem perfectly appropriate to provide a non-authoritative > response for that record as well. New standards are being set, no reason > why we all shouldn't follow suit. > > Not that I'm advocating anything specific or anything, but it does > logically follow that if the gTLD zone is serving non-authoritative data > for say, "opensrssss.net" then there's nothing other than convention > standing in the way of other DNS operators to further monkey with > authoritative responses. > > -- > > > -rwr > > > > > > > >
