On 2019-07-08 17:05 -0500, John Bambenek <j...@bambenekconsulting.com>
wrote:> For domains with no NS records? Who cares, they aren’t in actual
use. (Or if they are something is broken or more likely malicious so
block it).
They could be (in use), at some point. See past "fast flux" cases.
WHOIS was invented to be able to contact "someone" for any kind of
problems, technical or administrative. A domain not having NS records
may be a technical problem, or not, but if it is a problem who to
contact if that information lives in the DNS itself?
Yes, the onus is on domain owners (and that requires consensus and adoption
which are not given but why its being brought up here).
So you are expecting registrants to abide by this, and then all DNS
providers to update their web interface so that people will be able to
enter those records? What incentives will they all have to do that?
I am probably less optimist than you.
But my understanding is that it seems you are trying to publish some
data to derive some "reputation" based on it, instead of really data to
be able to contact people. They are different goals probably.
--
Patrick Mevzek
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