On May 24, 2007, at 10:45 PM, John Levine wrote:
I ask you: What would you suggest? It's quite hard to craft
technical solutions to policy failures.
Since the registrar business has degenerated into a race to the
bottom, I don't see anything better than setting a floor that is
the minimal allowable bottom. Since ICANN has neither the
inclination nor the competence to do that, and they have no control
over ccTLDs anyway, that means (egad!) regulation.
Yeah, I know the Internet is all over the world, but as a
participant in the London Action Plan, an informal talking shop of
the bits of governments that deal with online crime, spam, etc., I
can report that pretty much all of the countries that matter
realize there's a problem, and a lot of them have passed or will
pass laws whether we like it or not. So it behooves us to engage
them and help them pass better rather than worse laws.
Agreed, but adding a preview process doesn't cost much and would help
establish stability. There are millions of domains churning every
day. Just keeping track of which domains are new is costly. Once it
becomes common place for providers to withhold DNS information of new
domains, does it really make sense to permit domain records to change
frequently and within milliseconds after some holding period? While
provisions should be established for granting exceptions, requiring a
12 hour zone preview before going "live" should lead to significant
reductions in the amount of criminal activity depending upon this
insane agility that thwarts tracking and takedowns.
Allow security entities time to correlate upcoming domain changes,
and this swamp will drain rapidly.
-Doug