July 2013 archive

TDYR #022 – “Africa Straight Up” – Breaking Down Stereotypes

Many of us outside of Africa tend to think of everything happening in Africa in terms of one monolithic entity... that it is all "Africa"... yet that is so incredibly wrong when you understand the amazing diversity and differences within the people and countries of Africa. A 29-minute video called "Africa Straight Up" aims to break down those stereotypes and help introduce people to the true nature of "Africa". If you have a half-hour to spare, I'd strongly encourage you to check it out: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKUVfcXB14w

DNSSEC Workshop Streaming Live Now Out Of ICANN47

ICANN 47 meeting in Durban, South AfricaIf you are interested in the technical side of DNSSEC, there is a great 6+ hour workshop happening right now at ICANN 47 in Durban, South Africa.  You can listen to the audio and watch the slides at:

http://durban47.icann.org/node/39749

I am also live-tweeting some information and links out of our Twitter account at http://twitter.com/deploy360

It is a great agenda bringing together many of the leading researchers and implementers of DNSSEC.  Topics today include:

  • DNSSEC Deployment Around the World
  • DNSSEC for Managers – The Three Spheres
  • Panel Discussion: DNSSEC Activities in Africa – ISPs, Registries, and Registrars
  • Panel Discussion: DNSSEC Obligations in the Registration Accreditation Agreement
  • Presentation: Patrik Fältström, NetNod – Is the World Upside Down?
  • Panel Discussion: DNSSEC Planning and Operation
  • Panel Discussion – DNSSEC Innovation: DANE and Other DNSSEC Applications

(The full agenda is available online.)

If you can’t watch live right now, the sessions are being recorded so that you will be able to watch them later.

Helping Expand DNSSEC Deployment By Working With Shinkuro And Parsons/SPARTA

When we began what would become the Deploy360 Programme about 18 months ago, we were concerned about how our activity regarding promoting DNSSEC deployment would be seen by other groups already active in the space.  For instance we were very aware that there was the DNSSEC Deployment Initiative, funded by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), that had been very active for a good number of years.  The program had spawned a whole series of DNSSEC-related tools, a blog, the dnssec-deployment mailing list and other activities.  How could we best complement this existing work?  And would we be seen as a helpful new addition to the overall work?  Or would we be seen as a competitor to be distrusted?

Steve Crocker and Dan YorkWe were concerned and tried to step carefully as we began.  To our delight what we found was a very welcoming community that was very appreciative of the energy and platform that we were bringing to the effort. Over the past year in particular we have worked very closely with both Steve Crocker and his team at Shinkuro, Inc,. and Russ Mundy and his tools-focused team at a company originally called SPARTA and now part of a larger company, Parsons.  We’ve been working now with them on a variety of projects, including the monthly “DNSSEC Coordination Calls” that bring together people from across the community and industry interested in promoting and advancing the deployment of DNSSEC (and anyone is welcome to join the dnssec-coord mailing list).

And so it is with great pleasure that we can announce a formal Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the Internet Society, Shinkuro, and Parsons related to our combined efforts.  The MoU document, now posted to our site, explains the history and roles of each entity and reaffirms our joint commitment to doing all we can to work with the rest of the larger DNS community to bring about the full deployment of DNSSEC around the world.

Steve Crocker and I had a chance to jointly talk about this MoU and our combined effort at the Internet Society Advisory Council meeting held in Beijing in April. The photo accompanying this post shows us holding the signed MoU.  Russ Mundy was also there earlier in the week for the DNSSEC Workshop that we are all involved with that take place at ICANN meetings.

The signing of this MoU is an endorsement of the work we are already doing together – and a commitment by all three of us to work together to use the open multi-stakeholder process to involve even more people and organizations and to help the broader world understand how DNSSEC can significantly upgrade the security of the Internet.

We’re looking forward to continuing and expanding our work with Shinkuro and Parsons – and all of you!  Please join us… you can join the dnssec-coord mailing list, join into the DNSSEC communities on social networks or email, follow us on social networks, come to one of our ION conferences or the DNSSEC workshops at ICANN meetings… or just keep following us here on the site!

Let’s get to work and help get DNSSEC deployed everywhere!

TDYR #021 – In South Africa This Week For ICANN 47 And The Africa DNS Forum

In this episode I talk about why I am in Durban, South Africa, this week (ICANN 47 and Africa DNS Forum) and some initial thoughts about Durban. More thoughts on Africa to come in future episodes...

Watch “DNSSEC For Everyone – A Beginner’s Guide” Live Today From ICANN47

ICANN 47 meeting in Durban, South AfricaWant to understand what DNSSEC is all about?  Would you like to understand how DNSSEC helps make DNS more secure?  And why DNSSEC is important?

Today (July 15, 2013) we’ll be streaming the “DNSSEC For Everyone – A Beginner’s Guide” session live out of ICANN 47 in Durban, South Africa. This is a fun session that takes a humorous view on DNSSEC… and includes a number of people (myself included) acting out a skit showing how DNS and DNSSEC work! :-)    Feedback from past sessions is that this all has helped people understand better how this all works – and so we encourage you to watch if you can.

You can watch the video and slides for the session at:

http://icann.adobeconnect.com/dur47-hall1b

An audio-only streaming option is also available from the session page on the ICANN 47 web site.

The session begins at 5:00pm in Durban, South Africa, which is also 5:00pm in central Europe and 11:00am in US Eastern time.

If you can’t watch the event live, I will be recording the video locally and will post a copy to the Deploy360 YouTube channel as soon as I can.

 

FIR #712 – 7/15/13 – For Immediate Release

Brian Solis Speakers and Speeches coming, new FIR interviews scheduled; Quick News: era of print PC magazines ends, newswires beat Twitter to breaking news, CIPR launches a chat service, how not to use a Twitter bot; Ragan promo; News That Fits: a look at hashtags, Michael Netzley's Asia report, the Porter Novelli recruitment ad kerfuffle, Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, NSA snooping has nothing on marketing, Dan York's report, new paywall experiment; music from Deep Banana Blackout; and more.

Africa DNS Forum Happening Today And Tomorrow – Live stream / webcast available

AfTLD logoInterested in learning about the state of the Domain Name System (DNS) in Africa?  As I mentioned previously, I’m in Durban, South Africa, for the next week for the Africa DNS Forum today and tomorrow and then ICANN 47 next week.  The first Africa DNS Forum is happening right now and you can watch live now:

http://icann.adobeconnect.com/dur47-hall1b

The Africa DNS Forum agenda is posted on the AfTLD website and includes these topics:

  • Trends, opportunities and challenges of the DNS industry
  • Registries Business: Registry Strategies for domain name growth
  • Registrar business: Registrar strategies in a competitive environment
  • Legal Issues: Cross-border domain registrations
  • Registrar Accreditation and accreditation in a borderless environment
  • Governments and ccTLD: Supporting the domain name growth

The sessions are happening today, July 12, 2013, from 8:30 – 17:30 and tomorrow, July 13, from 9:00 – 14:00.  South Africa Standard Time is UTC+2 which is currently the same time as Central European Summer Time and 6 hours ahead of US Eastern time.

Related to our work here at Deploy360, there will be a section of the first panel on Registries Business that will be focused on DNSSEC and how usage can be accelerated for ccTLDs in Africa. I’m looking forward to hearing the presentations and discussions happening over these next two days – many great and exciting things are happening for the Internet in Africa right now!

First “Africa DNS Forum” To Be Streamed Live July 12 and 13 From Durban, South Africa (Featured Blog)

The first Africa DNS Forum will take place on Friday, July 12, and Saturday, July 13, 2013, in Durban, South Africa, in advance of next week's ICANN 47 meeting. Jointly organized by AfTLD, ICANN and the Internet Society, the Africa DNS Forum "aims to establish a platform for the DNS community across Africa and to advance the domain name industry and domain name registrations on the continent." More...

Comcast Now Enabling Users To Easily Find Out IPv6 Status In Their Area

Are you a Comcast customer wondering when you will ever get IPv6?  If so, we learned by way of a tweet over the weekend that Comcast has now made it easy for customers to know if they have IPv6 or will soon be getting it.  If you are a Comcast customer, you simply need to go to www.comcast6.net where you will see at the top of the page the current status in your region.  Here is a screen shot from one of our team members who is a Comcast customer:

Comcast IPv6 ready

As shown in Comcast’s blog post, if both your regional “CMTS” and your cable modem support IPv6 you will see that you are now using IPv6.  If your CMTS (the equipment on Comcast’s network to which your home cable modem connects) supports IPv6 but your cable modem does not, you will see the message above that our team member saw.  There is also, of course, a message saying that IPv6 is not yet available in your area.

It’s great to see Comcast making this kind of on-demand checking available for customers and we look forward to day when it is no longer necessary as IPv6 will be fully deployed. Congrats to the Comcast IPv6 team for rolling out this tool!

TDYR #020 – Are You Planning For The Longevity Of Your URLs?

When you use a URL in a marketing campaign or for an event or other short-time occurrence, are you planning for the longevity of those URLs? Are you planning to keep it around after the event or campaign is over?