-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 On 02/15/15 21:00, Warren Kumari wrote: > > draft-grothoff-iesg-special-use-p2p-names-04, Section 3 (Terminology > and Conventions Used in This Document): > "The abbreviation "pTLD" is used in this document to mean a pseudo > Top-Level Domain, i.e., a Special-Use Domain Name per [RFC6761] > reserved to P2P Systems in this document." > *** The terminology in draft-wkumari-dnsop-alt-tld-04 for pseudo-TLD conflicts with the one in draft-grothoff-iesg-special-use-p2p-names-04:
pseudo-TLD: A label that appears in a fully-qualified domain name in the position of a TLD, but which is not registered in the global DNS. If P2PNames is accepted, "our" pTLDs *will* be registered in the global DNS as Special-Use Domain Names. So, your definition is in direct conflict. Moreover, draft-wkumari-dnsop-alt-tld-04 mentions: Unless the name desired is globally unique, has meaning on the global context and is delegated in the DNS, it should be considered an alternate namespace, and follow the ALT label scheme outlined below. Therefore names reserved in draft-grothoff-iesg-special-use-p2p-names-04 are not concerned by .ALT: not only some of the P2PNames are globally unique (.ZKEY, .ONION, .BIT), the others (.GNU, .I2P, .EXIT) have privacy requirements that cannot be delegated to a DNS zone: the draft says: "pTLDs are not manageable by some designated administration." Instead, the DNS software must be aware of these pTLDs and return NXDOMAIN *without* passing them on to the DNS for resolution. The draft-wkumari-dnsop-alt-tld-04 does not cover this case, and cannot cover it in a better way that RFC6761 and the Special-Use Registry. (Please review http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-grothoff-iesg-special-use-p2p-names-04#section-2) Meanwhile, draft-wkumari-dnsop-alt-tld-04 suggests that the Tor project "could 'root' their namespace under onion.tor.example.com." This is not only technically mistaken, it's also irrelevant to this draft, as .onion names are (probabilistically) globally unique, they have (self-referential) meaning [in] the global context, and they (will be) "delegated" to the Special-Use Registry (which prompts for clarification of what "delegated in the DNS" means--I suppose it means to a registrar, which is not the case). Can you please remove any mentions to the Tor project in this draft, as it is irrelevant and can confuse people into thinking that .onion names can be delegated to the DNS? Regards, == hk -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQJ8BAEBCgBmBQJU4W58XxSAAAAAAC4AKGlzc3Vlci1mcHJAbm90YXRpb25zLm9w ZW5wZ3AuZmlmdGhob3JzZW1hbi5uZXRFQ0IyNkIyRTNDNzEyMTc2OUEzNEM4ODU0 ODA2QzM2M0ZDMTg5ODNEAAoJEEgGw2P8GJg9kiUP/0H4ohVtJ/TVLYZOnZQ7ux2G snY/KiLGKBmNoh6i4K4aY4vwBaN+5CFekRvR9I02MXXZcGmAQGCmutl08bxyICq2 aK3UDAvYlUJ25uulcgLI3zdRXxPyQJpEdSHn1cbH++XixbRPfOldQQmc/7R7II5R lniX5+2ONCxFQ0d9iur0vcxcCrm+jZnxSULKSMSqtdHIPJDiFzA2FPm2gT/gfUeC mpAP6MK/QbC3MrvPs/TEqgOnodaYVLezR/7vdGSk2FpxrAQHvg8bwRiqnO5vWBzH u04aqFTf2AMW8BqGwzwhOLseomfNwGa+rKSe+1dPR4t/UZgTiU366gv/HLnxgD5s 4oWqeTe7w2Dyi7mN9okmNlcg1TbT11N79vz4QA9GiJ86VdfjeFD9Sm9lAtV8gi5j 9Wu5FcAT4+MhJ2AyOh8SuYOT6ovkhlqcBoBPIIK0NQxZND0XR+KuTonXFolXMmd6 5FGsGOiNEI2eNRIi/NUyZ7sHWuI3/K2CbtO8OALfgC5j87zifqq7hdvIAsU5OMoH XnsremBGazIw24Y/t60bynsvdGuMxgz9UQe+Xgm1/vEt2uExo6WdF5FQuj2s78qW /slT00UmzrwRrR52/CsA5cvWjFyHxwlad6hSiwNfC6xrphXJJC+Nz4jDyseZXpWT PIQ9coQG6LpL+tTi/X6S =LDL6 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop