Sean,
Yes, it sounds like the evil bit. Why would anyone bother to set it?
Two reasons
1) By standardizing the process, it removes the excuse for using various hacks and duct tape.
2) Because the villian in Bond movies don't view themselves as evil. Google is happy to pre-check the box to install their Toolbar, OpenDNS is proud they redirect phishing sites with DNS lookups, Earthlink says it improves the customer experience, and so on.
Forgive my skepticism, but what I would envision happening is resolver stacks adding a switch that would be on by default, and would translate the response back to NXDOMAIN. At that point we would be right back where we started, only after a lengthy debate, an RFC, a bunch of code, numerous bugs, and a bunch of "I told you sos".
The other half of this is that it probably isn't *appropriate* to encourage abuse of the DNS in this manner, and if you actually add a framework to do this sort of thing, it amounts to tacit (or explicit) approval, which will lead to even more sites doing it. Consider where it could lead. Pick something that's already sketchy, such as hotel networks. Creating the perfect excuse for them to map every domain name to 10.0.0.1, force it through a web proxy, and then have their tech support people tell you that "if you're having problems, make sure you set the browser-uses-evilbit-dns". And that RFC mandate to not do things like this? Ignored. It's already annoying to try to determine what a hotel means if they say they have "Internet access." Reinventing the DNS protocol in order to intercept odd stuff on the Web seems to me to be overkill and bad policy. Could someone kindly explain to me why the proxy configuration support in browsers could not be used for this, to limit the scope of damage to the web browsing side of things? I realize that the current implementations may not be quite ideal for this, but wouldn't it be much less of a technical challenge to develop a PAC or PAC-like framework to do this in an idealized fashion, and then actually do so? ... JG -- Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net "We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN) With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.