A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts directories.
This draft is a work item of the Domain Name System Operations Working Group
of the IETF.
Title : DNS query name minimisation to improve privacy
Author : Stephane Bortzmeyer
The WG adopted this document some time ago (the announcement to the list is
dated Nov. 14, 2014).
It now needs reviewers to review and authors to revise.
If you agreed to review it earlier, or even if you didn't but you're
interested, please do.
Authors, any feedback on the reviews/comments
Per discussion, I have added the four use cases discussed at a previous
meeting.
The Recommendations section is now Considerations and Recommendations.
The guidance from the WG was that ISPs should be advised of how PTRs are
used, so they can decide how important it is to populate them. I left
On Sun, Feb 15, 2015 at 12:56 AM, Stephane Bortzmeyer bortzme...@nic.fr wrote:
On Thu, Feb 12, 2015 at 02:36:39PM +0800,
Andrew Sullivan a...@anvilwalrusden.com wrote
a message of 20 lines which said:
Warren and I have prepared draft-wkumari-dnsop-alt-tld-04. We'd
appreciate feedback. If
secretary hat on
On Feb 15, 2015, at 4:49 AM, Suzanne Woolf suzworldw...@gmail.com wrote:
The WG adopted this document some time ago (the announcement to the list is
dated Nov. 14, 2014).
Yep, and the authors turned in an WG-named draft:
On 15Feb15, Paul Hoffman allegedly wrote:
secretary hat on
On Feb 15, 2015, at 4:49 AM, Suzanne Woolf suzworldw...@gmail.com wrote:
The WG adopted this document some time ago (the announcement to the list is
dated Nov. 14, 2014).
Yep, and the authors turned in an WG-named draft:
Stephane,
The main reason why I say so is that we already have RFC 6761 and it
exists precisely to register special names.
Well, yes, albeit in the root, thereby generating useless traffic to the root
resulting in increased latency, additional network traffic, potential privacy
violation,
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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