I think ICANN would have to add a delay in where a request was sent out to make sure everyone was on the same page and then what happens the couple thousand (more) times a day that someone isn't updated or is misconfigured?
I think Netsol should be fined. Maybe even a class action suite filed against them for lost business. And that's it. On Jun 20, 2013 11:28 PM, "Hal Murray" <hmur...@megapathdsl.net> wrote: > > > ....at what point is the Internet a piece of infrastructure whereby we > > actually need a way to watch this thing holistically as it is one system > and > > not just a bunch of inter-jointed systems? Who's job is it to do nothing > but > > ensure that the state of DNS and other services is running as it > > should....who's the clearing house here. > > > The Internet: Discovering new SPOF since 1969! > :) Thanks. > > Perhaps we should setup a distributed system for checking things rather > than > another SPOF. That's distributed both geographically and administratively > and using several code-bases. > > In this context, I'd expect lots of false alarms due to people changing > their > DNS servers but forgetting to inform their monitoring setup (either > internal > or outsourced). > > How would you check/verify that the communication path from the monitoring > agency to the right people in your NOC was working correctly? > > > -- > These are my opinions. I hate spam. > > > > >