--- joe...@bogus.com wrote:
From: Joel Jaeggli <joe...@bogus.com>
On May 17, 2011, at 4:30 PM, Scott Brim wrote:
> On May 17, 2011 6:26 PM, <valdis.kletni...@vt.edu> wrote:
>> On Tue, 17 May 2011 15:04:19 PDT, Scott Weeks said:
>> 
>>> What about privacy concerns
>> 
>> "Privacy is dead.  Get used to it." -- Scott McNeely
> 
> Forget that attitude, Valdis. Just because privacy is blown at one level
> doesn't mean you give it away at every other one. We establish the framework
> for recovering privacy and make progress step by step, wherever we can.
> Someday we'll get it all back under control.

if you put something in the dns you do so because you want to discovered. 
scoping the nameservers such that they only express certain certain resource 
records to queriers in a particular scope is fairly straight forward.
--------------------------------------------------------


The article was not about DNS.  It was about "Persistent Personal Names for 
Globally Connected Mobile Devices" where "Users normally create personal names 
by introducing devices locally, on a common WiFi network for example. Once 
created, these names remain persistently bound to their targets as devices 
move. Personal names are intended to supplement and not replace global DNS 
names."  

I see a lot of folks on lists designing future networks where an identifier 
follows you everywhere and we as operators will have to deal with a public 
hostile to the idea of being followed.  It's happening now.  Just read all the 
articles on privacy lost.  It's not going to go away.  People like their 
privacy whether they're doing bad things or not.

scott

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