Wouldn't a context just be another root? Who then controls what context's are valid and who's context server is right? James ----- Original Message ----- From: "Timothy R. McKee" <trm3@nuvox.net> To: <nanog@merit.edu> Sent: Monday, March 19, 2001 4:14 PM Subject: RE: Multiple Roots simply need context
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The day that I have to start asking John Doe User questions like this is
day I move back into systems programming, writing device drivers is much less of a headache. I can just see the vendors ads now... go to http://www.abbey.shop (if you are new.net context) or http://www.abby.shop (if you are in mynew.net context). If this happens most of our normal user base will begin leaving in droves. (Count LOST REVENUE... LOST JOBS... PROBABLY MINE!!)
This is not an academic exercise. This has become a business catering to ordinary people that are NOT computer/network wizards. The minute we start to require our users to make informed complicated decisions we will begin to loose them all.
In the telco world this would be the equivalent of a telco subscribing to one of several SS7 providers - each with overlapping SS7 point codes (this is the telephony routing table).
-----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu]On Behalf Of Chris Davis Sent: Monday, March 19, 2001 15:24 To: 'nanog@merit.edu' Subject: Multiple Roots simply need context
There is no problem in having hundreds or thousands of multiple root servers for DNS.
We have a problem with CONTEXT. There is no existing way to ascertain
the the
context from which users are resolving domain names.
Solution: DNS Context Servers... DNS operators subscribe their machines to the DNS context they want. In one context, ".xxx" can resolve via new.net, in another context, ".xxx" resolves via one of the other .xxx providers. To keep ICANN and friends happy, ICANN could be the "default" context.
Help calls then have one and only one additional question: "To which DNS context do you subscribe?"
Context servers are pretty obviously where things are headed. Sooner or later, some new.net company is going to "take." If we already have DNS context servers in place, life will be much easier when an alternative TLD provider does succeed.
-Chris Davis --not really selling private address space, that was a joke --not a fan of new.net's plugin, since it breaks ping, traceroute, and tradition
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