> Il 20/01/2020 22:45 Eric Vyncke (evyncke) <[email protected]> ha scritto:
> 
> But, as section 3.5.1 ("in the recursive resolvers") raised a lot of 
> discussions during the first IETF Last Call, and as the authors reacted to 
> those comments by deep changes in the text, let's have a new IETF Last Call 
> before proceeding with IESG evaluation.

First of all, I'd like to thank Sara for all the effort in rewriting a lot of 
text yet another time to address all the comments. I think the result is good, 
even if I would have preferred other text on certain things.

There is only a minor comment that I still have on 3.5.1. The new version has a 
part about DNS centralization risks, but it only addresses the risks deriving 
from the ISP market, not the newer ones coming from "application-specific 
resolver selection", which were mentioned in -03. I have two alternative text 
proposals to cover this:

1) in the bullet list in 3.5.1.1, add another bullet:

"* popular applications directing DNS traffic by default to specific dominant 
resolvers"

or 

2) in 3.5.1.1.2., last paragraph, just after "increase or decrease user 
privacy" and before the hyphen, add:

"and promote or counter centralization"

Given Eric's (not Éric's :-) ) comment on the requirements for user control in 
3.5.1.1.2, i.e. that they also apply to the selection of non-encrypted 
resolvers today, it would be fine for me if they were extended to device/OS 
resolver configuration in general. In that case, I would plead for the addition 
of a point regarding the fact that the user should be enabled to configure the 
resolver for the OS and all the applications at once, in a single place.

I also have an editorial suggestion: to reduce the nesting of sub-sections in 
3.5, perhaps you could break down section 3 into multiple first-level sections 
and do some renumbering, e.g.

3. -> 3.
3.1, 3.2, 3.3 -> 4.1, 4.2, 4.3 within "4. Risks in the DNS data"
3.4 -> "5. Risks on the wire"
3.5 -> "6. Risks in the servers"
3.6, 3.7 -> 7.1, 7.2 within "7. Other risks"

In any case, I think that we now have a solid document and hope we can release 
it soon.

-- 
 
Vittorio Bertola | Head of Policy & Innovation, Open-Xchange
[email protected] 
Office @ Via Treviso 12, 10144 Torino, Italy

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