On Nov 15, 2013, at 12:41 AM, Stephane Bortzmeyer <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 06:02:23PM +0100, > Phil Regnauld <[email protected]> wrote > a message of 25 lines which said: > >> I'm waiting for the first news articles reporting corporate >> networks who've used .[insert new tld] as their private domain >> and are now seeing strange things. > > "BigCo CIO declares that the problem their Web site experienced > yesterday was the result of a collision between their internal TLD > .sexy, that they use for years to name the internal machines, and the > recently created ICANN (Nasdaq: ICAN) .sexy TLD." Unlikely. There are two sources of collisions: internal TLDs and search lists. The following is more likely: "BigCo CIO declares that the problem their Web site experienced yesterday was the result of a collision between their internal management server whose FQDN is www.sexy.bigco.com. They use Internet standard search lists, and thus normally type 'www.sexy' to get to the server. This now conflicts with the recently created ICANN (Nasdaq: ICAN) .sexy TLD." _______________________________________________ dns-operations mailing list [email protected] https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-operations dns-jobs mailing list https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-jobs
