On Tuesday, 5 March 2019 02:21:42 UTC Christopher Morrow wrote:
> can I ask, what happens when a domain is intentionally down though? For
> instance, take .eg... ~4yrs back? (maybe 5?) Someone requested that the
> master/shadow NS go down, hard. All public auth servers eventually (in a
> day or so) went dark too.

i already raised that question, very far up-thread. got no answer.

> If someone is 'ordered' to make a zone dark, there may be reasons for that
> action, and real penalties if the request is not honored.
> Is this draft suggesting that the DNS operations folk go against the wishes
> of the domain owner by keeping a domain alive after the auth servers have
> become unreachable? How would a recursive resolver know that the auth is
> down: "By mistake" vs: "By design" ?

this the essence of the argument against utility for this entire proposal. no 
data should be served beyond its TTL unless some new leasing protocol is first 
defined, to obtain permission and to provide a cache invalidation method.

vixie


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