Scott,
Thank you. It makes sense now.
i.e. some zones resolve differently based on the origins of the query, and
some zones resolve the same globally for all queries from any source.
Linda
From: Scott Morizot
Sent: Friday, February 14, 2020 2:11 PM
To: Linda Dunbar
Cc: Morizot Timothy S ; Pa
Ah. Should have used the Oxford comma for clarity. I'm normally one of the
people who always uses it so that was probably an accidental omission.
There should be a comma before that last 'and'. I was describing the three
possible states for any query and response. We have all three scenarios in
pro
I've posted a follow-up to my article last month about SHA-1 chosen prefix
collisions and DNSSEC. This discusses DNSSEC validation:
https://www.dns.cam.ac.uk/news/2020-02-14-sha-mbles.html
Summary:
DNSSEC validators should continue to treat SHA-1 signatures as secure
until DNSSEC signers have ha
Scott,
Thank you very much for the suggested changes.
For the following sentence, do you you that different paths/zones can resolve
differently based on the origin of the query and zones?
Then what do you mean by adding the subphrase that "that resolve the same
globally for all queries from any
The IESG has received a request from the Domain Name System Operations WG
(dnsop) to consider the following document: - 'Running a Root Server Local to
a Resolver'
as Informational RFC
The IESG plans to make a decision in the next few weeks, and solicits final
comments on this action. Please