Warren Kumari has entered the following ballot position for draft-ietf-ipsecme-split-dns-14: Discuss
When responding, please keep the subject line intact and reply to all email addresses included in the To and CC lines. (Feel free to cut this introductory paragraph, however.) Please refer to https://www.ietf.org/iesg/statement/discuss-criteria.html for more information about IESG DISCUSS and COMMENT positions. The document, along with other ballot positions, can be found here: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ipsecme-split-dns/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- DISCUSS: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- I hope I'm just missing something obvious here, but this seems like it may cause a significant security issue. Lots of "regular" users use VPNs for access the Internet, either to bypass censorship / content restrictions, or to improve their privacy. These are not "corporate" / "enterprise" VPNs, but rather public ones - and sometimes they are run by people I wouldn't entirely trust. What is to stop one of these VPN providers setting: INTERNAL_DNS_DOMAIN(www.paypal.com) INTERNAL_DNSSEC_TA(43547,8,1,B6225AB2CC613E0DCA7962BDC2342EA4...) or, better yet: INTERNAL_DNS_DOMAIN(com) INTERNAL_DNSSEC_TA(43547,8,1,B6225AB2CC613E0DCA7962BDC2342EA4...) and so being able to spoof DNSSEC for paypal.com / all of .com? This is especially worrying if something like DANE is ever deployed... The draft *does* says: "Other generic or public domains, such as top-level domains, similarly SHOULD NOT be whitelisted." - this doesn't really answer the above. 1: It is increasingly hard to know what is a "real" TLD (.internal? .bank? .home?) 2: How do I programatically tell if www.foo.net is a "public domain"? What is a public domain anyway? How is an implementer supposed to address this? It also says: "Any updates to this whitelist of domain names MUST happen via explicit human interaction to prevent invisible installation of trust anchors." Is my auntie really expected (or competent) to understand what "Your VPN provider, TrustVPN wants to whitelist com. Do you want to allow this? [Y/N]" means? I'm hoping that I'm completely misunderstanding how the INTERNAL_DNSSEC_TA bit works. Also, some of the DNS behavior is handwavey - I think that the document really should be reviewed by DNSOP, but will leave it to Eric to make that call. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- COMMENT: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- This section: " The content of INTERNAL_DNS_DOMAIN and INTERNAL_DNSSEC_TA may be passed to another (DNS) program for processing. As with any network input, the content SHOULD be considered untrusted and handled accordingly." feels a bit handwavey. Are there currently any DNSSEC validating clients which can easily take a targeted TA for a specific domain / set of domains? I’m also not quite sure how this interacts with delegations. E.g: example.com 600 IN NS ns01.internal.example And then INTERNAL_DNS_DOMAIN(internal.example) — if the client runs a local recursive, does it need to send the query to ns01 though the VPN or not? _______________________________________________ IPsec mailing list IPsec@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ipsec