Re: VeriSign

2006-01-26 Thread John A. Kilpatrick
On Wed, 25 Jan 2006, Martin Hannigan wrote: I would like to thank all of you for your support while I worked at VeriSign. Hi there - what team were you on? I joined VeriSign about 2 months ago and I am on Network West. Thanks, John -- John A. Kilpatrick

VeriSign

2006-01-25 Thread Martin Hannigan
Folks, Since my friend Gadi brought it up, I left VeriSign on January 3 after 3 years of solid employment. It was a good run. I was asked to move to Dulles, VA and I declined for personal reasons. I live in Boston, MA. and was a commuter to the DC area for the most part. I've taken a pos

Re: ICANN and Verisign settle over SiteFinder

2005-10-27 Thread Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law
ancialnews/D8DEL2TO7.htm? campaign_id=apn_tech_down&chan=tc I don't understand what VeriSign receives in return for their kowtow (under the agreement, they basically waive any right to criticize ICANN's role). Two possible explanations: * ICANN signalled a positive outcome of a

Re: ICANN and Verisign settle over SiteFinder

2005-10-25 Thread John Levine
>I don't understand what VeriSign receives in return for their kowtow >(under the agreement, they basically waive any right to criticize >ICANN's role). As someone else noted, a perpetual cash cow in .COM with 7%/year escalator clause. > * ICANN signalled a positi

Re: ICANN and Verisign settle over SiteFinder

2005-10-25 Thread Todd Vierling
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005, Florian Weimer wrote: > >> Two possible explanations: > > > > 2+2=5, right? :) > > Oops. 8-) No, you got it right. The [third] option at the end, "play nice", has only a passing association to the realm of possibility. -- -- Todd Vierling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL P

Re: ICANN and Verisign settle over SiteFinder

2005-10-25 Thread Florian Weimer
* william elan net: > They get to continue to be .COM registry forever as new agreement > would extend to 2012 and then automatically extended further without > formal process as it happened recently for .NET. They also are going > to be able to increase registry fees for .COM by 7% per year whi

Re: ICANN and Verisign settle over SiteFinder

2005-10-25 Thread william(at)elan.net
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005, Florian Weimer wrote: http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8DEL2TO7.htm? campaign_id=apn_tech_down&chan=tc I don't understand what VeriSign receives in return for their kowtow (under the agreement, they basically waive any right to criticize ICA

Re: ICANN and Verisign settle over SiteFinder

2005-10-24 Thread Florian Weimer
* Chris Woodfield: > Said the flowerpot: "Oh no, not again..." > > http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8DEL2TO7.htm? > campaign_id=apn_tech_down&chan=tc I don't understand what VeriSign receives in return for their kowtow (under the agreement, th

ICANN and Verisign settle over SiteFinder

2005-10-24 Thread Chris Woodfield
Said the flowerpot: "Oh no, not again..." http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8DEL2TO7.htm? campaign_id=apn_tech_down&chan=tc -C

Re: ICANN, VeriSign Will Consider Changes on .net Agreement

2005-07-17 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine
> >I don't know if it is the repeated "ICANN can't be trusted / is corrupt" > >messaging, or the sensitivity of the .NET "rebid" (aka VGRS deregulation) > >that got the prompt action -- > > It's more that ICANN has figured out that registrars are where all > their revenue comes from, and if they

Re: ICANN, VeriSign Will Consider Changes on .net Agreement

2005-07-17 Thread John Levine
>I don't know if it is the repeated "ICANN can't be trusted / is corrupt" >messaging, or the sensitivity of the .NET "rebid" (aka VGRS deregulation) >that got the prompt action -- It's more that ICANN has figured out that registrars are where all their revenue comes from, and if they dragged thei

Re: ICANN, VeriSign Will Consider Changes on .net Agreement

2005-07-14 Thread Elmar K. Bins
. IMHO the entire issue comes down to something like this (please don't nail me on details, it's a coarsely drawn picture): - ICANN issued a formal request for proposals - Some registries-to-be - including Verisign - made offers - ICANN chose Verisign (no speculation about th

Re: ICANN, VeriSign Will Consider Changes on .net Agreement

2005-07-14 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine
FWIW, we did a "Major Protest" at the Rome meeting about Sitefinder and it took Vint months to come to the conclusion that it (interposition on the lookup error semantics) was not just a business decision. I don't know if it is the repeated "ICANN can't be trusted / is corrupt" messaging, or the

ICANN, VeriSign Will Consider Changes on .net Agreement

2005-07-14 Thread Fergie (Paul Ferguson)
Via Netcraft: [snip] ICANN and VeriSign will consider changes to the new .net registry agreement in response to a mass protest by major domain name registrars, who said the deal represented a "breach of trust" between ICANN and the registrar community. In response to a joint prote

verisign

2005-06-16 Thread Micah McNelly
Can someone with verisign operations please contact me offlist. Thanks! -- /m "I bet the human brain is a kludge." - Marvin Minsky

Fwd: ICANN Board Designates VeriSign ...

2005-06-09 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine
ICANN's announcement is at: http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-08jun05.htm See also: http://icann.org/tlds/dotnet-reassignment/net-rfp-process-summary-08jun05.pdf And so much for that. Eric

Re: Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Matt Larson
sponder who isn't known to support them be allowed a retry with no extensions if it responds with such an RCODE. [...] Matt -- Matt Larson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> VeriSign Naming and Directory Services

Re: Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Paul Vixie
> ... I repeat: One don't have to "support" EDNS0, just don't report it as > error, like broken routers does with ECN. And in this "mode of > operations" there's no MORE ways to abuse it for the said purpose than > currently exists. please actually read RFC 2671 before you ask any questions abo

Re: Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Florian Weimer
* Michael Tokarev: >> EDNS0 can be easily abused for traffic amplication purposes. 8-( > > Root and TLD nameservers rarely have large answers to queries to > exceed 512 bytes. The miscreants have partial write access to most TLD zones, so they can create record sets whose size approaches or exce

Re: Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Michael Tokarev
Florian Weimer wrote: > * Michael Tokarev: > > >>Well ok, I know it's kinda expected -- "i don't understand what you're >>asking for, can't even repeat your question". But the next question >>is -- *why*? > > EDNS0 can be easily abused for traffic amplication purposes. 8-( Root and TLD namese

Re: Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Florian Weimer
* Michael Tokarev: > Well ok, I know it's kinda expected -- "i don't understand what you're > asking for, can't even repeat your question". But the next question > is -- *why*? EDNS0 can be easily abused for traffic amplication purposes. 8-(

Re: Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Michael Tokarev
Mark Andrews wrote: > In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you write: > >>Noticied today. All Verisign's GTLD servers broke >>EDNS0 (RFC2671). Here's how it looks like: [] >>;; received 12 bytes response from 192.5.6.30 port 53 >>;; unexpected number of entries in QUERY section: 0 >>;; ->>HEADER<<- o

Re: Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Mark Andrews
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you write: > >Noticied today. All Verisign's GTLD servers broke >EDNS0 (RFC2671). Here's how it looks like: > >query: > >$ dnsget -t mx -vv microsoft.net. -n 192.5.6.30 >;; trying microsoft.net. >;; sending 42 bytes query to 192.5.6.30 port 53 >;; ->>HEADER<<- opco

Verisign broke GTLDs again?

2005-05-16 Thread Michael Tokarev
Noticied today. All Verisign's GTLD servers broke EDNS0 (RFC2671). Here's how it looks like: query: $ dnsget -t mx -vv microsoft.net. -n 192.5.6.30 ;; trying microsoft.net. ;; sending 42 bytes query to 192.5.6.30 port 53 ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NOERROR, id: 64471, size: 42 ;; fl

Re: Confirmation of receipt of the transfer request at Verisign

2005-01-20 Thread David Lesher
Speaking on Deep Background, the Press Secretary whispered: > > > on 1/19/05 9:56 PM, Bruce Tonkin at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > Here is the copy of the email Melbourne IT received. > > Thanks for providing a copy of the e-mail Bruce. You've been > extraordinarily forthcoming on NANOG. I

Re: Confirmation of receipt of the transfer request at Verisign for panix.com

2005-01-20 Thread william(at)elan.net
On Wed, 19 Jan 2005, Richard Parker wrote: > on 1/19/05 9:56 PM, Bruce Tonkin at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > Here is the copy of the email Melbourne IT received. > > Thanks for providing a copy of the e-mail Bruce. You've been > extraordinarily forthcoming on NANOG. I wish that Dotster, a

Re: Confirmation of receipt of the transfer request at Verisign for panix.com

2005-01-19 Thread Richard Parker
on 1/19/05 9:56 PM, Bruce Tonkin at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Here is the copy of the email Melbourne IT received. Thanks for providing a copy of the e-mail Bruce. You've been extraordinarily forthcoming on NANOG. I wish that Dotster, as the losing registrar, was as willing to discuss the hij

Confirmation of receipt of the transfer request at Verisign for panix.com

2005-01-19 Thread Bruce Tonkin
PROTECTED] Sun Jan 9 12:40:35 2005 Return-Path: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Received: from verisign-grs.org (snoopy.verisign-grs.net [192.153.247.4]) by galahad.inww.com (8.12.9/8.12.9) with SMTP id j091eYgt003545 for <>; Sun, 9 Jan 2005 12:40:35 +1100 (EST) Date: Sat, 8 Jan 2

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Sean Donelan
On Sun, 16 Jan 2005, Alexei Roudnev wrote: > What happen if someone stole 'aol.com'domain tomorrow? Or 'microsoft.com'? > How much damage will be done until this sleeping behemots wake up, set up a > meeting (in Tuesday I believe - because Monday is a holiday), make any > decision, open a toicket

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Daniel Karrenberg
On 16.01 16:34, Hank Nussbacher wrote: > > On Sun, 16 Jan 2005, Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine wrote: > > One could almost think this hijack was timed to the release of the ICANN > "Requests Public Comments on Experiences with Inter-Registrar Transfer > Policy" from Jan 12: > http://www

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Daniel Karrenberg
On 16.01 16:34, Hank Nussbacher wrote: > > On Sun, 16 Jan 2005, Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine wrote: > > One could almost think this hijack was timed to the release of the ICANN > "Requests Public Comments on Experiences with Inter-Registrar Transfer > Policy" from Jan 12: > http://www

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Alexei Roudnev
- because Monday is a holiday), make any > > decision, open a toicket, pass thru change control and restore domain? 5 > > days? > > with due respect to panix (i knew of panix before i ever knew of aol, even > living in europe), i imagine another bigger 'behemoth', as y

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Hank Nussbacher
am would be solved forever if ...] > > > There is a fundamental choice of jurisdictions question. Is ICANN the > correct venue for ajudication, or is there another venue? This is what > recourse to the "ask a real person" mechanism assumes, that talking to > a human being

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine
he better choice. Bill made this comment: > Since folks have been working on this for hours, and according to > posts on NANOG, both MelbourneIT and Verisign refuse to do anything > for days or weeks, would it be a good time to take drastic action? > > Think of what we'd do about

RE: seed resolvers? Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Scott Morris
] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Petra Zeidler Sent: Sunday, January 16, 2005 6:28 AM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: seed resolvers? Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help) Hi, Thus wrote Alexei Roudnev ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > What happen if someone stole 'aol.com'domai

seed resolvers? Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Petra Zeidler
Hi, Thus wrote Alexei Roudnev ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > What happen if someone stole 'aol.com'domain tomorrow? Or 'microsoft.com'? > How much damage will be done until this sleeping behemots wake up, set up a > meeting (in Tuesday I believe - because Monday is a holiday), make any > decision, open

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Michael Loftis
--On Sunday, January 16, 2005 07:40 + Thor Lancelot Simon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: The purported current admin contact appears to be a couple in Las Vegas who are probably the victims of a joe job. A little searching will reveal that people by that name really *do* live at the address giv

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Paul G
- Original Message - From: "Alexei Roudnev" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "William Allen Simpson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Sent: Sunday, January 16, 2005 4:07 AM Subject: Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help) > > I addition, there is a go

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread Alexei Roudnev
I addition, there is a good rule for such situations: - first, return everything to _previous_ state; - having it fixed in previous state, allow time for laywers, disputes and so on to resolve a problem. It makes VeriSign position very strange (of course, it is dumb clueless behemot as it was

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-16 Thread William Allen Simpson
Since folks have been working on this for hours, and according to posts on NANOG, both MelbourneIT and Verisign refuse to do anything for days or weeks, would it be a good time to take drastic action? Think of what we'd do about a larger ISP, or the Well, or really any serious financial t

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-15 Thread Paul G
- Original Message - From: "Thor Lancelot Simon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Paul G" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: Sent: Sunday, January 16, 2005 2:40 AM Subject: Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help) --- snip --- > I don't know if these ar

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-15 Thread Thor Lancelot Simon
On Sun, Jan 16, 2005 at 02:22:59AM -0500, Paul G wrote: > > > - Original Message - > From: "Thor Lancelot Simon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: > Sent: Sunday, January 16, 2005 2:04 AM > Subject: Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help) >

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-15 Thread Paul G
- Original Message - From: "Thor Lancelot Simon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: Sent: Sunday, January 16, 2005 2:04 AM Subject: Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help) > > Alexis Rosen tried to send this to NANOG earlier this evening but it > lo

Re: panix.com hijacked (VeriSign refuses to help)

2005-01-15 Thread Thor Lancelot Simon
ervers and been replaced with the hijacker's records. Note that we contacted VeriSign both directly and through intermediaries well known to their ops staff, in both cases explaining that we suspect a security compromise (technical or human) of the registration systems either at MelbourneIT or at

Re: VeriSign Releases Domain Name Data

2004-12-03 Thread James Baldwin
On 3 Dec 2004, at 08:52, Fergie (Paul Ferguson) wrote: December 1, 2004 -- (WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) -- Internet security company and domain registry operator VeriSign Inc. (verisign.com) announced on Wednesday tiat it has released the Domain Name Industry Brief for the third quarter of 2004

VeriSign Releases Domain Name Data

2004-12-03 Thread Fergie (Paul Ferguson)
December 1, 2004 -- (WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) -- Internet security company and domain registry operator VeriSign Inc. (verisign.com) announced on Wednesday tiat it has released the Domain Name Industry Brief for the third quarter of 2004, noting the registration of 5.1 million new domain names

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-09-10 Thread Dan Hollis
eth. > On Fri, Sep 10, 2004 at 12:46:07AM -0700, Dan Hollis wrote: > > So the attorney creates an IP holding company to which the patent is > > assigned, and the company offers to license the patent to Verisign. > > When Verisign refuses, they get sued for lost revenue. >

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-09-10 Thread Joe Rhett
ollis wrote: > So the attorney creates an IP holding company to which the patent is > assigned, and the company offers to license the patent to Verisign. > When Verisign refuses, they get sued for lost revenue. The holding company must be making money from the patent to demonstrate the val

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-09-10 Thread Dan Hollis
On Fri, 10 Sep 2004, Joe Rhett wrote: > On Thu, Sep 09, 2004 at 04:01:46PM -0700, Dan Hollis wrote: > > If the patent is strong enough, wouldnt some patent attorney be willing to > > defend it on a contingency basis? > > With the potential $$ in a patent violation judgemen

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-09-10 Thread Joe Rhett
On Thu, Sep 09, 2004 at 04:01:46PM -0700, Dan Hollis wrote: > If the patent is strong enough, wouldnt some patent attorney be willing to > defend it on a contingency basis? > > With the potential $$ in a patent violation judgement against verisign, I > would think attorneys wo

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-09-09 Thread Dan Hollis
ays to exploit dns wildcarding, thus preventing verisign from > >doing anything useful with it at all... > It would only be useful if those people were also in a position to > vigorously defend said patents when (and if) they were infringed. > / Mat If the patent is strong enoug

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-09-09 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams in Portland Maine
> It would only be useful if those people were also in a position to > vigorously defend said patents when (and if) they were infringed. assign the patents to icann, to the eff, to the registrar constituency ...

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-09-09 Thread Matthew Sullivan
Dan Hollis wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2004, Andre Oppermann wrote: PS: I will patent it myself to prevent Versign from doing this. Wouldnt it be beautiful if a bunch of people patented the hell out of various ways to exploit dns wildcarding, thus preventing verisign from doing anything useful

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-17 Thread Bruce Campbell
On Mon, 16 Aug 2004, Paul Wouters wrote: > Unfortunately, SiteFinder did not have such a destructive effect as we > had all wanted it to have. Statistics in our network showed no > significant increase in dns traffic. Especially if you compare it > against things like SoBig: > > http://www.xtdnet

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Alexei Roudnev
upon to parrot > > somebody else's point of view caused you to laugh so hard you spewed > > coffee all over your keyboard while reading the above tidbits, then > > send the repair bill to verisign, not me. i'm just the messenger.) > > Unfortunately, SiteFinder d

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Paul Vixie
s to keep a root server operator from doing something, statistically speaking at least, is to tell them that some other root server operator is doing it. > >> Flipped on its head, what's to stop the root operators from > >> circumventing anything Verisign or any other TLD op

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread bmanning
> Remember, there are 13 IPs no one can get around - no other "TLD" to > register your domain name. > > Flipped on its head, what's to stop the root operators from > circumventing anything Verisign or any other TLD operator does? we'd have to agre

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Patrick W Gilmore
t any of the "alternative root" operators instead. YMMV. Let's confine the discussion to the 99.99% of us who use the Internet .. uh .. "normally". (Best description I could think up.) I mean, they are called "whackos" for a reason. Flipped on its head, what's

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Paul Vixie
head, what's to stop the root operators from > circumventing anything Verisign or any other TLD operator does? root server operators don't control the root zone, they only publish it. some combination of itu (via the iso3166 process), icann/iana, ietf/iab, and us-DoC are the folks you'd go to if you wanted a toplevel wildcard. -- Paul Vixie

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Dan Hollis
On Mon, 16 Aug 2004, Andre Oppermann wrote: > PS: I will patent it myself to prevent Versign from doing this. Wouldnt it be beautiful if a bunch of people patented the hell out of various ways to exploit dns wildcarding, thus preventing verisign from doing anything useful with it at

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Patrick W Gilmore
Flipped on its head, what's to stop the root operators from circumventing anything Verisign or any other TLD operator does? -- TTFN, patrick

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Paul Vixie
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Michael Loftis) writes: > ... > The BIND source was modified in response to CUSTOMERS REQUESTS. ... actually, it was multiple credible threats of codeforking that got this done. (as i explained in the press at that time, "isc cherishes our relevance.") -- Paul Vixie

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Andre Oppermann
Paul Vixie wrote: also, to me, as a domain holder under .com who uses my domain for more than just a web site, i can't tolerate the lack of RCODE=3 when a "nearby" name is used by mistake. verisign promised not to use the connections for anything nefarious, but they are not a

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Paul Vixie
7;re paying to do it. in the presence of a wildcard and paid advertising, (a) no longer holds and there is no way to do (b). if sitefinder returns, i'd expect to have to find a new parent domain, who has no wildcard-like keyword system, just for risk management reasons. some domain holders migh

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Michael Loftis
I'm not a lawyer but I still think businesses have a valid lawsuit against Verisign for whatever the legal term is for using their copyrighted names and likenesses. With SiteFinder it guarantees Verisign 'owns' any domain a particular company may no have yet purchased until such

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-16 Thread Paul Wouters
On Tue, 10 Aug 2004, Paul Vixie wrote: > (and if the idea that kc or woolf could be depended upon to parrot > somebody else's point of view caused you to laugh so hard you spewed > coffee all over your keyboard while reading the above tidbits, then > send the repair bill to

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-08-09 Thread Paul Vixie
> PS. I am excited - Vixie as a co-conspirator... Vixie, you can be proud -:). i'm not, though. not proud, and not a co-conspirator. this whole thing makes me want to puke. the worst thing is, the people i know inside verisign seem to wish i wouldn't take it so personally. but i

Re: ICANN Panel Pans VeriSign Search Service

2004-07-09 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams
to issue a cease-and-desist to VGRS for SiteFinder. That got an EAGAIN (you are wrong, we're fast enough) from Cerf, and an ENOCLUE from Twomey. For the original, look to: http://www.icann.org/committees/security/ssac-report-09jul04.pdf See also http://www.icann.org/legal/verisign-v-icann-m

ICANN Panel Pans VeriSign Search Service

2004-07-09 Thread Fergie (Paul Ferguson)
For anyone who cares: "A panel of experts convened by the nonprofit organization that manages the Internet's domain-name system today took aim at the company that controls the popular "dot-com" and "dot-net" domains, issuing a report concluding that a controversial search service designed to

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-21 Thread Alexei Roudnev
Title: Re: Verisign vs. ICANN Thanks, Dickson - next time I'll try to write exact text  from the very beginniong -:). This is _exactly_ what I want to say, with examples I was too lazy to write myself.     To make Alexei's argument's syntax agree with the intended semanti

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-21 Thread Dickson, Brian
Title: Re: Verisign vs. ICANN Stephen J. Wilcox (SJW) wrote: SJW> I do not believe there is any technical spec prohibiting this, SJW> in fact that DNS can use a wildcard at any level is what enables SJW> the facility. It is not always the case that everything a spec defines, is in

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-20 Thread Alexei Roudnev
-search-in-russian.relcom.net (additional service). Notice, that unwanted service (search in Verisign) violates ALL this cases, making impossible flexible, competitive processing of such requests, Just again - DNS design, by RFC, do not include someone who thinks for you and guess, whcih exactly name are you req

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-19 Thread Stephen J. Wilcox
may be reasonable to provide a set of independent _technical_ > reviews, showing that ICANN plays a role of technical authority, just do not > allowing to violate a protocols. For the second case (waiting lists), it is > not technical issue, but it is anti-competitional attempt from Verisign a

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-19 Thread Alexei Roudnev
ssue, but it is anti-competitional attempt from Verisign as well. I can ask my Russian folks to review it as well (dr. Platonov, Dimitry Burkov) but I am not sure, if it is of any use... Anyway, good review, explaining history and revealing real ICANN role, should be done. If VeriSign wish to deploy serv

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-19 Thread Paul Vixie
> Just curious. How much would it differ from > > http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=icannwatch-20&path=tg/detail/-/0262134128/qid%3D1041619276/sr%3D1-1 > > and > > http://www.law.miami.edu/~froomkin/articles/icann.pdf as i said, it can't be written by an ambulance-chaser or nobo

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-19 Thread Peter H Salus
News was published). I haven't really looked at Ruling the Root, because I was turned off by Dave Crocker's review in IPJ. But, anyway, as it appeared in 2002, I imagine it contains little of the recent Verisign/Netsol "business." However, I should most likely give Mueller

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-19 Thread Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law
Just curious. How much would it differ from http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=icannwatch-20&path=tg/detail/-/0262134128/qid%3D1041619276/sr%3D1-1 and http://www.law.miami.edu/~froomkin/articles/icann.pdf ? On Fri, 18 Jun 2004, Jonathan Slivko wrote: > > Maybe try these guys?

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Michael Froomkin - U.Miami School of Law
see http://www.icannwatch.org/article.pl?sid=04/06/18/0334236&mode=nested On Fri, 18 Jun 2004, Jon R. Kibler wrote: > > OK, I have obviously missed something here... I know that the courts > dismissed the original complaint against ICANN, but what has happened > since, and what is this about so

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Paul Vixie
Linneweh) writes: > ... > It is amazing that one psrson Paul Vixie could be so intimidating that he > must be intimidated and maligned as a conspirator in order to eliminate > him as a potential threat because of his knowledge. i'm not sure verisign cares whether they intimidat

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Jonathan Slivko
Maybe try these guys? http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/is99/governance/love.html -- Jonathan On Fri, 18 Jun 2004 15:38:50 -0700, Peter H Salus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Paul (et al.), > > If you can find a willing publisher and an organization > able to supply some funds, I would be delight

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Peter H Salus
Paul (et al.), If you can find a willing publisher and an organization able to supply some funds, I would be delighted to work on a "real" history of Internet "governance" since RFCs 881-883. (Most of the funds would be for travel, Xeroxing, etc.) Peter ---

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Paul Vixie
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gordon Cook) writes: > in my estimation [verisign] would like to control telecom by control of > the numbers associated therewith. > > ... > > ... I am tying to stay away from this cesspool. It brings no income - > only grief. But, knowing what i k

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Paul Vixie
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Gordon Cook) writes: > in my estimation [verisign] would like to control telecom by control of > the numbers associated therewith. > > ... > > ... I am tying to stay away from this cesspool. It brings no income - > only grief. But, knowing what i k

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Stephen J. Wilcox
On Fri, 18 Jun 2004, John Neiberger wrote: > It never ceases to amaze me that some companies will move forward with actions > that they know will give them a horrible reputation. Does the potential for > short-term financial gain outweigh the benefits of a good long-term > reputati

Re: Postini, Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Ray Wong
On Fri, Jun 18, 2004 at 08:02:34PM +, Edward B. Dreger wrote: > > JN> Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2004 12:56:11 -0600 > JN> From: John Neiberger > > JN> Postini's patent issue (do a Google search to get more info) > JN> is suspicious, and _possibly_ indicative of a slimy tactic. > > It does look pre

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Owen DeLong
.NET namespaces. my employer was a bidder for .ORG, and gives away EPP software ("ISC OpenReg"), so there's some overlap with the registry/registrar community that verisign might be thinking of. Didn't Verisign sell off the Registrar stuff, thus making OpenReg not a competitor? Owen --

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Henry Linneweh
It is amazing that one psrson Paul Vixie could be so intimidating that he must be intimidated and maligned as a conspirator in order to eliminate him as a potential threat because of his knowledge. I find that pretty ironic that a billion dollar corporation is that weak. -Henry --- Patrick

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Jon R. Kibler
Patrick W Gilmore wrote: > > On Jun 18, 2004, at 2:25 PM, Wayne E. Bouchard wrote: > > > Um, unless I really missed something during this whole episode, that > > was the only way TO disable it. > > Have the roots recurse and put a wildcard in for anything that does not > resolve. > > Makes Paul

Re: Postini, Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Edward B. Dreger
JN> Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2004 12:56:11 -0600 JN> From: John Neiberger JN> Postini's patent issue (do a Google search to get more info) JN> is suspicious, and _possibly_ indicative of a slimy tactic. It does look pretty ridiculous. ETRN, formail, procmail, Web- based UIs, etc. have been around far

Postini, Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread John Neiberger
>It never ceases to amaze me that some companies will move forward with >actions that they know will give them a horrible reputation. Does the >potential for short-term financial gain outweigh the benefits of a good >long-term reputation? Verisign, SCO, and Postini come to mind

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Patrick W Gilmore
On Jun 18, 2004, at 2:25 PM, Wayne E. Bouchard wrote: verisign's official position throughout the sitefinder launch was that "users are free to disable it if they want to." they did NOT want this characterized as them shoving their sitefinder service down anybody's unwilling throat. so i don't

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Wayne E. Bouchard
inder co-conspirator [...]. > > Paul Vixie is an existing provider of competitive services for > registry operations, including providing TLD domain name hosting > services for ccTLDs and gTLDs, and a competitor of VeriSign for > new registry ope

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Ariel Biener
the vendor would issue the feature. It is the administrators choice to use the feature. As such, it is not the vendors fault in any way. After the courts drop this one as well, I am curious what will be the next Verisign idea. They (read: their lawyers) have proved themselves to be full of bright

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Vincent J. Bono
> Also, while drastic, filing suit > doesn't preclude adults getting together and working out the the matter > before anything makes it to court. Having been a part of a few large lawsuits here, I can say that many judges will force at least a conversation between signatories of both parties (

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Edward B. Dreger
PV> Date: 18 Jun 2004 17:25:08 + PV> From: Paul Vixie PV> my employer was a bidder for .ORG, and gives away EPP PV> software ("ISC OpenReg"), so there's some overlap with the PV> registry/registrar community that verisign might be thinking PV> of. I do

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread John Curran
At 10:34 AM -0600 6/18/04, John Neiberger wrote: > >It never ceases to amaze me that some companies will move forward with >actions that they know will give them a horrible reputation. Hmm... I'm not going to try to defend Verisign (or ICANN for that matter), but will note that t

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Paul Vixie
PP software ("ISC OpenReg"), so there's some overlap with the registry/registrar community that verisign might be thinking of. -- Paul Vixie

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Edward B. Dreger
PV> Date: 18 Jun 2004 16:44:41 + PV> From: Paul Vixie PV> i think they mean ns-ext.isc.org (or its old name, ns-ext.vix.com), PV> which offers "TLD hosting" without fee to about 60 domains: [ snip ] PV> if it's not that, then perhaps they're just smoking crack. Still a bit of a stretch. T

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Paul Vixie
> PV> Paul Vixie is an existing provider of competitive services for > PV> registry operations, including providing TLD domain name hosting > PV> services for ccTLDs and gTLDs, and a competitor of VeriSign for > PV> new registry operations.

Re: Verisign vs. ICANN

2004-06-18 Thread Edward B. Dreger
EBD> Date: Fri, 18 Jun 2004 16:16:07 + (GMT) EBD> From: Edward B. Dreger EBD> I'm missing something. By what stretch of whose imagination EBD> does root nameserver operations compete with a registrar? Apologies for replying to my own post. I just had a [sinister] thought: I've typed ".cmo

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