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Internet journalism means you can sensationalize hypotheticals like "The IANA may fudge its own rules" and "Money talks" without having to provide a source for those claims.
And why should I be careful choosing a TLD or interpret this as a warning? The Internet isn't breaking, it's changing. All this does is fear monger in favor of one Pope of the Internet.
4 11 ReplyKILL CENTRALIZED DNS
8 0 ReplyOK poof there are now 100 name servers delegating .com. Which one does your ISP default you to? [1-100]
2 2 ReplyAll of them, find one that responds an answer valid for my local saved key.
The DNS server is no longer an authority on its own, just your keyring matters.
1 0 ReplyWho issued the key?
2 1 ReplyThe certificate authorities on my ring that I trust. For normal people that's already included in their OS or browser
1 0 ReplySo, an authority? It sounds like this would complicate DNSSEC by requiring the "root keys" to be stored outside the DNS itself.
1 1 ReplyWe already have to have key rings. Centralized DNS is just a second, superfluous layer of authority (and a massive grift) on top
1 0 Reply"Centralized DNS" is an oxymoron, we'll have to agree to disagree
1 1 Reply
Yeah, I gave up reading at
it’s a shocking reminder that there are forces outside of the internet that still affect our digital lives.
4 0 Reply"real people still exist" shocked pikachu
1 1 Reply