On Wed, Jun 25, 2008 at 04:58:18PM +0800, ?????? <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote a message of 85 lines which said:
> Thanks, Dean, Lican, I must tell you that associating with a known troll like D. A. is not a good idea to spread your ideas. Almost everything in his message is completely wrong (for instance, in the Nanog discussion he talked about, *one* network operator made the mistake to identify DNS+TCP with AXFR and he was promptly corrected by everyone else). > For example, the fibre cables connecting US with China was broken by > earthquake, then almost all web pages was unreachable even the > machine was in China because of root servers are located in USA. Like in your Internet-Draft, this sentence shows a big lack of knowledge about the DNS you pretend to fix. There are root servers instance in China for many years. Anyway, a few seconds after it starts, any DNS resolver in China has certainly the names and addresses of ".cn" name servers in its cache and can lose connectivity with the root without big problems. Do you have a detailed technical report of these break-ups? IT is certainly interesting to know why access to these sites fail but blaming the root looks like a "provider explanation" <http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~ballard/bofh/excuses>. _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop