As an ATTBI customer in this exact situation, Yeah! Also remember, we're talking legacy cable (monopolist) mindset in most cases. I've already long-ago voted with DirecTV and an analog antenna in my attic, but DirecWay is only competitive (price and latency) if the only other option is dialup or less. Best, -Al BTW, the TV system is HDTV/Surround. How many cable systems support that? -----Original Message----- From: Chris Woodfield [mailto:rekoil@semihuman.com] Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2002 7:38 AM To: North America Network Operators Group Mailing List Subject: Re: ATTBI refuses to do reverse DNS? If the people who "vote with their wallets" here are the ATTBI customers, don't forget that if you're not served by DSL, cable broadband is really the only good option for broadband access (I'm not counting satellite, with >1s ping times, or wireless, which is still in its infancy as a residential solution). And rarely will you find a home anywhere in the US served by more than one cable company. Makes it kinda kard to vote with your wallet when the vendor has de facto monopoly power. -C
The people who are supposedly hurt here are those who ultimately have the most influence. In the end they can vote with their wallets even if they can't edit the appropriate zone files directly. (And the whole idea behind DNS trust really revolves around having two different parties agree on the mapping, not in simply allowing the user to edit their own reverse DNS!)
Just as Network Address Translation is not a security solution, neither is checking INADDR.
I don't think anyone has said that DNS consistency is a security solution. You keep confusing these concepts I think. It's only one tiny part of the picture. Fully consistent DNS only increases the level of trust you can have in the hostnames used. Since hostnames are supposed to be more stable than IP addresses, you _want_ to have more trust in the hostnames, but with current protocols you cannot unless there is full consistency between forward and reverse lookups.
Now if you check INADDR over Secure DNS, you might start having some level of information to trust.
We can only hope, but I'll believe it when I see it.
-- Greg A. Woods
+1 416 218-0098; <gwoods@acm.org>; <g.a.woods@ieee.org>; <woods@robohack.ca> Planix, Inc. <woods@planix.com>; VE3TCP; Secrets of the Weird <woods@weird.com>