Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-30 Thread Jorge Amodio
On Mon, Nov 29, 2010 at 10:28 PM, David Hiers hie...@gmail.com wrote:
 This little border skirmish is a good reminder that we build and
 operate one of the key battlegrounds on which all current and future
 wars are, and will be, fought.

Too much SciFi, nothing better and more effective than a fully loaded
ol'gun, the bigger the better, also if it can fly remotely operated.

-J



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-30 Thread Jeffrey Lyon
Not if it's traffic is re-routed/compromised. ;)

Jeff

On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 10:01 AM, Jorge Amodio jmamo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Too much SciFi, nothing better and more effective than a fully loaded
 also if it can fly remotely operated.

 -J





-- 
Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team
jeffrey.l...@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net
Black Lotus Communications - AS32421
First and Leading in DDoS Protection Solutions



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-29 Thread Mirko Maffioli
2010/11/17 Jorge Amodio jmamo...@gmail.com:
 Forgot to include that the 18 minute reference is on page 244.

 -J


From Renesys blog:
http://www.renesys.com/blog/2010/11/chinas-18-minute-mystery.shtml

-- 
Saluti
Mirko



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-29 Thread David Hiers
This little border skirmish is a good reminder that we build and
operate one of the key battlegrounds on which all current and future
wars are, and will be, fought.

David







On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 9:08 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian
ops.li...@gmail.com wrote:
 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/

 --
 Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)





Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Martin A. Brown

Greetings,

   http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/
 
  Hard to decipher what the Fox report is actually talking about, 
  but I suspect it relates to 
  http://www.renesys.com/blog/2010/06/two-strikes-i-root.shtml

I would echo the thoughts earlier in this thread that the Fox story 
is making rather non-technical or technically vague statements.

As I read the text [*], my suspicion is that this report has very 
little to do with the I-root's global Beijing instance (exposure to 
risk here would requires DNS tampering, visibility outside China 
and, to boot, is probabilistic, rather than wholesale).  The article 
makes references to the terms hijacking, redirection, a 'state-owned 
Chinese telecommunications firm' and 'security vulnerabilities 
pertaining to Internet routing processes'.
 
It seems much more likely that this article is a digested summary of 
the routing leak (re-origination) of tens of thousands of prefixes 
by AS 27374, discussed on this list and detailed by BGPMon:

  http://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/2010-April/020789.html
  http://bgpmon.net/blog/?p=282

Danny McPherson also posted a nice summary here, as well, and 
identfies the problem we know and love so well (BGP) and even refers 
'routing by rumour', as you did David.

  http://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/2010-April/020864.html

The Fox story twice refers to 2010-04-18, but the date was 
2010-04-08.

-Martin

-- 
Martin A. Brown --- Renesys Corporation --- mabr...@renesys.com



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Stephane Bortzmeyer
On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 12:13:39PM +0530,
 Suresh Ramasubramanian ops.li...@gmail.com wrote 
 a message of 17 lines which said:

 Man in the middle rewriting of DNS query responses is the only thing I
 can think of.

And it's easy to detect since the rewriter tells the truth about its
own name. From China, query dig @I.root-servers.net CH TXT
hostname.bind and, instead of the normal name of a Netnod instance,
you will get a chinese name (such as c1-zaojunmiao-ns1)...





Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Lindqvist Kurt Erik
On 16 nov 2010, at 18.08, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
 
 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/

I can detect from the report that this has anything to do with i.root? Can you 
explain that? 

Looking at the dates referred to it seem more to be related to the routing 
leaks on April 8th. Or do you have additional information? 

Best regards,

- kurtis -







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Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Lindqvist Kurt Erik
On 17 nov 2010, at 07.17, Fred Baker wrote:
 
 
 On Nov 17, 2010, at 1:08 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
 
 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/
 
 I have read the article and the list, and I'm puzzled. It's pretty clear that 
 the root gets its records from a common source, and that the copies of them 
 being delivered by a given root server were different. As a result, traffic 
 intended to go place A went to place B if the TLD lookup happened to go to 
 the particular root server in question. How did an instance of the root 
 server find itself serving changed records? While there is no obvious 
 indication of who made the change or for what reason, it's unlikely it was 
 accidental.
 
 Not sure what Glenn Beck, Fox News, or Godwin's Law have to do with it. There 
 was a technical event that resulted in misrouting of traffic, and while 
 international concerns regarding it had political overtones, the technical 
 event is not a political one. If it was your traffic that had been misrouted, 
 you might have issued expressions of concern. So why respond to it with a 
 political response?
 
 Sounds to me like one of the arguments for DNSSEC deployment...

Before the rumor mill get's going based on the Renesys work again, the article 
doesn't mention DNS, it mentions re-routing of traffic. I would like to repreat 
what we have said in the past. 

As best as we can tell - no i.root-servers.net instance operated by us has 
answered incorrectly - ever. We serve the data exactly as we receive it from 
IANA. 

When I read the article I assumed it referred to the routing leaks of April 8th 
that was also discussed on Nanog. But I haven't read the report, nor has anyone 
contacted us regarding it. Renesys has though, a few weeks ago contacted us to 
get some data from us on what happened in March. 

Best regards,

- kurtis -






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Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Lindqvist Kurt Erik
On 17 nov 2010, at 15.37, Lindqvist Kurt Erik wrote:
 
 On 16 nov 2010, at 18.08, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
 
 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/
 
 I can detect from the report that this has anything to do with i.root? Can 
 you explain that? 


Apparently typing fast is not a good idea :-( I meant to say I cannot 
deduct...

 Looking at the dates referred to it seem more to be related to the routing 
 leaks on April 8th. Or do you have additional information? 
 
 Best regards,
 
 - kurtis -
 
 
 
 
 


Best regards,

- kurtis -






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Description: This is a digitally signed message part


Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
I had the timeframe wrong then and it was the April 8 routing leaks.
Sorry for the false alarm.

On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 8:07 PM, Lindqvist Kurt Erik
kur...@kurtis.pp.se wrote:


 I can detect from the report that this has anything to do with i.root? Can 
 you explain that?

 Looking at the dates referred to it seem more to be related to the routing 
 leaks on April 8th. Or do you have additional information?



-- 
Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread bmanning

two observations:

) this sounds/looks like a modern kremvax story
) what a slow news day

--bill


On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 09:07:26PM +0530, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
 I had the timeframe wrong then and it was the April 8 routing leaks.
 Sorry for the false alarm.
 
 On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 8:07 PM, Lindqvist Kurt Erik
 kur...@kurtis.pp.se wrote:
 
 
  I can detect from the report that this has anything to do with i.root? Can 
  you explain that?
 
  Looking at the dates referred to it seem more to be related to the routing 
  leaks on April 8th. Or do you have additional information?
 
 
 
 -- 
 Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Jorge Amodio
I believe the entire mambo-jambo badly researched and digested news
piece comes from page 241 of the following report:

http://www.uscc.gov/annual_report/2010/annual_report_full_10.pdf

Cheers
Jorge



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-17 Thread Jorge Amodio
Forgot to include that the 18 minute reference is on page 244.

-J

On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Jorge Amodio jmamo...@gmail.com wrote:
 I believe the entire mambo-jambo badly researched and digested news
 piece comes from page 241 of the following report:

 http://www.uscc.gov/annual_report/2010/annual_report_full_10.pdf

 Cheers
 Jorge




The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-16 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/

-- 
Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-16 Thread Jorge Amodio
What's the big deal ?  Just look at what the sticker under whatever
you are using to type says ... Made in ?

We live in a hijacked world.

Cheers
BTW avoid foxnews, not much operational content there.

On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 11:08 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian
ops.li...@gmail.com wrote:
 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/

 --
 Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)





Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-16 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 6:09 AM, Jorge Amodio jmamo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Cheers
 BTW avoid foxnews, not much operational content there.

I know it, you know it .. and the problem is that operational content
turning up there has a nasty way of getting political

As it is, fox news is reporting something which was presented to congress

So, lessigisms like code is law aside, I guess yes, it IS political now.

-- 
Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-16 Thread Andrew Kirch
Really?  Seems to me like Glen Beck is always drawing a series of tubes
on his chalkboard?  They all lead to Godwin's law though.  Very strange...

On 11/16/2010 7:39 PM, Jorge Amodio wrote:
 What's the big deal ?  Just look at what the sticker under whatever
 you are using to type says ... Made in ?

 We live in a hijacked world.

 Cheers
 BTW avoid foxnews, not much operational content there.

 On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 11:08 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian
 ops.li...@gmail.com wrote:
 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/

 --
 Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)






Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-16 Thread Fred Baker

On Nov 17, 2010, at 1:08 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:

 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/

I have read the article and the list, and I'm puzzled. It's pretty clear that 
the root gets its records from a common source, and that the copies of them 
being delivered by a given root server were different. As a result, traffic 
intended to go place A went to place B if the TLD lookup happened to go to the 
particular root server in question. How did an instance of the root server find 
itself serving changed records? While there is no obvious indication of who 
made the change or for what reason, it's unlikely it was accidental.

Not sure what Glenn Beck, Fox News, or Godwin's Law have to do with it. There 
was a technical event that resulted in misrouting of traffic, and while 
international concerns regarding it had political overtones, the technical 
event is not a political one. If it was your traffic that had been misrouted, 
you might have issued expressions of concern. So why respond to it with a 
political response?

Sounds to me like one of the arguments for DNSSEC deployment...


Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-16 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
Man in the middle rewriting of DNS query responses is the only thing I
can think of.

On Wed, Nov 17, 2010 at 11:47 AM, Fred Baker f...@cisco.com wrote:
 I have read the article and the list, and I'm puzzled. It's pretty clear that 
 the root gets its records from a common source, and that the copies of them 
 being delivered by a given root server were different. As a result, traffic 
 intended to go place A went to place B if the TLD lookup happened to go to 
 the particular root server in question. How did an instance of the root 
 server find itself serving changed records? While there is no obvious 
 indication of who made the change or for what reason, it's unlikely it was 
 accidental.



-- 
Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)



Re: The i-root china reroute finally makes fox news. And congress.

2010-11-16 Thread David Conrad
On Nov 16, 2010, at 8:17 PM, Fred Baker wrote:
 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2010/11/16/internet-traffic-reportedly-routed-chinese-servers/
 
 I have read the article and the list, and I'm puzzled. It's pretty clear that 
 the root gets its records from a common source, and that the copies of them 
 being delivered by a given root server were different.

Hard to decipher what the Fox report is actually talking about, but I suspect 
it relates to http://www.renesys.com/blog/2010/06/two-strikes-i-root.shtml

 Not sure what Glenn Beck, Fox News, or Godwin's Law have to do with it. There 
 was a technical event that resulted in misrouting of traffic, and while 
 international concerns regarding it had political overtones, the technical 
 event is not a political one. If it was your traffic that had been misrouted, 
 you might have issued expressions of concern. So why respond to it with a 
 political response?

As for political vs. technical, it feels (particularly given the Fox report is 
sourced from a paper on US-China relations) like yet more cyber war drum 
beating, but that might just be me.

 Sounds to me like one of the arguments for DNSSEC deployment...


DNSSEC would let you know something odd happened (if you're doing a DNS lookup, 
have validation turned on, and can tell the difference between SERVFAIL 
generated stub resolver timeout and a random Internet brokenness), although it 
doesn't really give you any tools to fix it.  What really needs to be fixed is 
routing by rumor.

Regards,
-drc