Seems to me that the answer is simple: as a domain owner you should keep
an *inventory* of all your domain names along with anniversary dates,
and set reminders if needed.
The anniversary day normally will remain the same, only the year changes
after renewal. TLDs such as .nl/.be/.de etc are somewh
On 14-04-2015 22:31, Michael Sinatra wrote:
>
> The problem I have with the way that this is posed by the US-CERT
> advisory is that it neglects to point out that DNS is designed to be a
> public database.
The thing is, AXFR goes beyond the 'public' requirement.
In DNS you submit a specific requ
This is an interesting discussion actually.
It's all about a rather benign but widespread misconfiguration.
Not long ago, I ran a survey against a small ccTLD and tested each
domain name for AXFR.
The ccTLD zone file itself having been obtained - you guessed it - by
way of zone transfer...
Surpri
That definitely makes sense. I guess fpdns might be able to confirm this.
On 24-06-2013 01:56, Jon Lewis wrote:
On Mon, 24 Jun 2013, Marjorie wrote:
4. Now something more puzzling, I have noticed at least one NS that
exhibits some sort of random behavior: it typically denies AXFR at
the
ehave like that ?
Cheers,
Marjorie
___
dns-operations mailing list
dns-operations@lists.dns-oarc.net
https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-operations
dns-jobs mailing list
https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-jobs
00692.html
This too: http://osdir.com/ml/culture.internet.history/2007-12/msg1.html
But no central repository ?
Best,
Marjorie
___
dns-operations mailing list
dns-operations@lists.dns-oarc.net
https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-operation