Dear John, The days when some in the technical community could just discard others arguments by saying that "[you] have no idea how the Internet works" have long passed. I will not get intimidated nor will I step back. Old tricks, won't work, it's as old as the dysfunctional WHOIS and will disappear. Also your last paragraph obliges me to clarify: it's not always a "he" that might be arguing! it's sometimes, though might it be rarely, a "she". No one asked to protect people from their governments (I have heard this before as well). But also people should not be endangered or even minimally disturbed by making their personal information public. There are many many scenarios when personal information can be abused, and governments might not be involved. I might not know as much as you do about how the Internet works. But I know one thing: There will be a change. The convenience of security researchers and trademark owners is not going to be set above domain name registrants right to data protection. But I am sure the cybersecurity community can come up with a more creative way of preserving cybersecurity without relying on using personal information of domain name registrants and violating their rights! Farzaneh In article <23257.12824.250276.763926@gargle.gargle.HOWL> you write:
So you think restricting WHOIS access will protect dissidents from abusive governments?
Of all the rationalizations that one seems particularly weak.
Oh, you're missing the point. This is a meme that's been floating around in academia for a decade: the brave dissident who somehow has managed to find web hosting, e-mail, broadband, and mobile phone service but for whom nothing stands between her and certain death but the proxy whois on her vanity domain. If someone makes this argument you can be 100% sure he's parroting something he heard somewhere and has no idea how the Internet actually works. ________________________________ From: NANOG <nanog-bounces@nanog.org> on behalf of John Levine <johnl@iecc.com> Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2018 10:43 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Cc: bzs@theworld.com Subject: Re: Is WHOIS going to go away? In article <23257.12824.250276.763926@gargle.gargle.HOWL> you write:
So you think restricting WHOIS access will protect dissidents from abusive governments?
Of all the rationalizations that one seems particularly weak.
Oh, you're missing the point. This is a meme that's been floating around in academia for a decade: the brave dissident who somehow has managed to find web hosting, e-mail, broadband, and mobile phone service but for whom nothing stands between her and certain death but the proxy whois on her vanity domain. If someone makes this argument you can be 100% sure he's parroting something he heard somewhere and has no idea how the Internet actually works. R's, John