Posted on 12/09/2015 7:32:50 PM PST by dayglored
GayMuzzie doesn’t like the Samizdat, wants the MSM monopoly back.
Guys, consider pinging, this might be somewhat esoteric for some users, but it has huge (”YUUUGE!”) potential consequences for all of us.
This is nothing compared to what’s going to happen when Obama gives the Internet to the United Nations
‘So something needs attention, and soon. ‘
Yeah, the perps.
This is no different than blowing up a ‘brick and mortar’ utility.
Yup. It is a big deal. 3 of out 13 is too many. We need to add more roots servers.
It's kinda funny, because it wasn't really all that many years ago that some of the root servers were just sitting under someone's desk. I'd be interested in seeing what kind of hardware they are running most of the root domain servers on these days, and how big a network connection they have incoming.
From that article:
A large botnet of infected computers or other Internet-connected devices is the most plausible explanation for such an attack. That would explain how the attack occurred, but it doesn't shed any light on why it was carried out. It has also renewed calls for networks to implement BCP 38, an Internet Engineering Task Force standard for defeating IP address spoofing. Many networks enforce it, but some still don't, and they're the ones making such attacks possible.
From that article's comments:
For anybody who was wondering, BCP 38 is a 15 year old proposal, and it's pretty straightforward to implement - in most cases it'd be a single firewall rule on an ISP's customer-facing router(s).There's no justification for not implementing it basically everywhere.
Oh, this is bad. We should turn control of the internet over to the UN so it can be more secure. /s
Where are the root servers and who controls them?
I blame climatey changey.
What's scary, Jim, is that an awful lot of people DO think that way, and they are gonna vote next November.
Most seem to be in the United States.
There is a map on the article I linked above showing some of the 13 root servers. They are labeled A to M.
A list of the organizations that manage the servers is here:
http://www.iana.org/domains/root/servers
This complicates the answer to your question:
(from https://www.apnic.net/community/support/root-servers)
The 13 root nameservers each have an identifying letter, from A-M. However, while only 13 names are used for the root namesevers, there are many more physical servers. Some exist in only one instance while others, such as C, F, I, J, K, L, and M servers all exist in multiple locations on different continents. These duplicates use anycast address announcements to provide a completely decentralized service.Having multiple servers distributed around the world provides high performance DNS lookup independent of the user's location as the request does not have to be dealt with by a single remote instance of the nameserver.
I hadn’t heard about this. I’m no expert but I have had some professional networking training. I agree this is very serious but not at all unexpected. America is very, very dependent on the Internet these days.
People have legitimate, non-malicious reasons for wanting to spoof an IP address.
What would a legitimate use for IP spoofing be? Spoofing <> anonymity.
Privacy.
Ability to log into servers that block certain IPs.
That’s not what IP spoofing is - IP spoofing forges the return address, so you can send info (to crash servers) but it never comes back to you. It is a one way path, so you can’t use it, in your example, to anonymously log into a website. Basically not a useful mechanism for people who care about privacy. Tor or VPN is the solution for that.
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