On May 17, 2011, at 10:30 13PM, Joel Jaeggli wrote:

> 
> On May 17, 2011, at 6:09 PM, Scott Weeks wrote:
> 
>> --- 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."  
> 
> you mean like mac addresses? those have a tendency to follow you around in 
> ipv6...
> 
This is why RFC 3041 (replaced by 4941) was written, 10+ years ago.  The problem
is that it's not enabled by default on many (possibly all) platforms, so I
have to have

# cat /etc/sysctl.conf
net.inet6.ip6.use_tempaddr=1

set on my Mac.


                --Steve Bellovin, https://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb






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