August 2013 archive

Network Computing: IPv6 Adoption On The Rise

networkcomputingWe were very pleased to see the article “IPv6 Adoption On The Rise” appear in Network Computing last week where author Tom Hollingsworth wrote about some of the new IPv6 adoption statistics coming out of the folks at RIPE NCC.  As he writes:

The more interesting number comes again from RIPE when you cross reference the number of IPv4 prefixes that are also announcing IPv6 prefixes. Almost 70% of the IPv4 address space is being announced by networks that also announce IPv6. That’s pretty impressive. When you break it down by the size of the IPv4 network, it gets even better: The majority of networks with more than 100,000 IPv4 addresses are announcing IPv6 as well.

All of which is great to see!  Looking at the specific RIPE NCC graph he references, I find it great to see that over 20% of networks in the APNIC region are already advertising IPv6 prefixes.

All in all just yet more signs that IPv6 adoption is moving upward!  Have you deployed IPv6 yet?  If not, why not?  How can we help you?

FIR #717 – 8/19/13 – For Immediate Release

Coming up: Bloggade, FIR Live on Google link rules, and two FIR interviews; Quick News: AppNet's first birthday, SNCR's Coalition for Secure Digital Media, Slack's launch, YouTube's freeze of views at 301; Ragan promo; News That Fits: checking the facts with Full Fact Finder, Dan York's report, companies aren't adding social media to crisis plans, Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, Audi's augmented reality iPhone app, Twitter's study into viral videos; music from The House of Jed; and more.

TDYR #028 – TextIt, A New SMS App Service From Rwanda, Africa

I was fascinated by TextIt, a new SMS application service, not so much by their service, which is cool, but by the fact that they come out of Kigali, Rwanda, in Africa. Read the Hacker News thread to understand the technical aspects behind what they are doing - it's very cool and a sign of the incredible energy and innovation coming out of Africa! http://textit.in/ https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6212029

Friday Humor: “Keep Calm and Enable DNSSEC” (and IPv6, too!)

keepcalmandenablednssecGiven that it’s a Friday afternoon and the end of our work week, I felt there was no better way to end the week than to highlight the image tweeted out by Marco Davids of SIDN this morning.  Yes, indeed, we in the DNSSEC community now have our own version of the (overused?) “Keep Calm” Internet meme…

(And you can get the full-size version via Marco’s Twitter account.)

Now in seeing Marco’s tweet, I learned of www.keepcalm-o-matic.co.uk which I kind of knew had to exist out there somewhere, but had just never taken the time to find.

So… in order that IPv6 advocates don’t feel left out… I’ve created a “Keep Calm and Enable IPv6″ image as well!  (And yes, I tried fitting both DNSSEC and IPv6 in, but didn’t like the result.)

Anyway, thanks, Marco, for giving us something to smile about today!   Have a great Friday afternoon… and for those of you have a weekend ahead of you, I hope you have a great one!

Video: Matt Mullenweg’s State of the Word 2013

If you are fan of WordPress... if you use WordPress or maintain a WordPress site... and haven't yet watched Matt Mullenweg's "State of the Word 2013" talk from WordCamp San Francisco in July, I'd strongly encourage you to sit down for a bit and watch:

It's a great view into where the WordPress ecosystem is today - and where it is going in the future. Incredible stats, such as 46 million downloads in just the past 12 months! 336 new themes added in the past 12 months. 6,758 plugins added in the last year... and so much more.

A huge number is that 18.9% of web sites on the Internet now run WordPress!

Intriguing info about WordPress as an app platform... and where it is all going...


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Digging Into The August 14 .GOV Outage Related To DNSSEC

dnssecOver the past day there have been a number of news reports talking about the brief outage that occurred yesterday, August 14, 2013, when sites ending in .GOV were unreachable if you were performing DNSSEC validation on those domain names.  Many of those news reports are pointing at Johannes Ullrich’s post on the SANS ISC Diary site where he noted this issue.

The issue was fixed relatively quickly and the speculation on the dns-operations mailing list was later verified by a message sent from Verisign’s Duane Wessels to a number of mailing lists:

On the morning of August 14, a relatively small number of networks may have experienced an operational disruption related to the signing of the .gov zone.  In preparation for a previously announced algorithm rollover, a software defect resulted in publishing the .gov zone signed only with DNSSEC algorithm 8 keys rather than with both algorithm 7 and 8.  As a result .gov name resolution may have failed for validating recursive name servers.  Upon discovery of the issue, Verisign took prompt action to restore the valid zone.

We can argue, perhaps, with the statement that “a relatively small number of networks” experienced this issue as those “networks” include all of Comcast’s 18 million users plus the millions of users out there who are using Google’s Public DNS services, as well as all the many other ISPs around the world who have enabled DNSSEC validation for their customers.

However, it may be true that a relatively small number of users of those networks happened to be visiting .GOV sites during the time period in question.

Regardless, the important part is to note here that this was an operational issue with the administration of DNSSEC for the .GOV domain rather than any particular issues related to the technology behind DNSSEC.  As Duane Wessels had noted in an earlier message back on July 30, 2013, the .GOV zone is preparing to make a change to make its deployment of DNSSEC more secure:

An algorithm roll for the .gov zone will occur at the end of August, 2013.  This notice is provided as a courtesy to the DNSSEC community.  No action should be required on your part.

The .gov zone is currently signed with algorithm 7 (RSASHA1-NSEC3-SHA1) and will be changed to use algorithm 8 (RSA/SHA-256), bringing it in line with other top-level domains such as as .com, .net, and the root zone.  The zone will be signed with both algorithms for a period of approximately 10 days.

Further scheduling details will be provided one week before the algorithm roll begins.

It seems that in Verisign’s preparations for that change an error was made and an incorrectly configured zone file was published instead.  While obviously it would be preferable if the mistake had not been made, kudos to the team at Verisign for correcting the issue quickly and for also reporting back to the larger DNS / DNSSEC operations community on what the problem was that occurred.

Duane Wessels noted in his message today that Verisign is still planning to proceed with the algorithm rollover at the end of August and so we can expect to see more communication from them as they proceed with the change.

 

Amused By Spotify’s Clever Suggestions of Popular Music "When You Were In School"

Working in a home office, I've found that I enjoy having Spotify on in the background playing a much larger range of music than what I have in my own collection. I have found the "Discover" tab to be quite a useful way to learn of newer bands that I have never heard of before. I did have to laugh yesterday, though, when I encountered this box in the Discover tab:

Spotify suggestions

Yes, indeed, as any child of the '80s can attest, both of those were quite popular... I remember a summer around 1985 when it seemed like every radio station (remember them?) had "Money For Nothing" on near-constant repeat.

Similarly, Spotify noted that songs were "huge when you were a teenager", such as:

Spotify huge

And I do remember, and still play, that Billy Joel song, although I'll admit that I don't really remember that Eddie Murphy song at all.

Regardless, it's definitely a clever and fun way that Spotify is using my age data to help highlight songs that I might want to listen to again.

If you have been using Spotify's Discover tab, have you rediscovered some old songs this way?


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TDYR #027 – 10 Years Ago Today, The Massive Power Blackout In US And Canada

10 years ago today, on August 14, 2003, there was a massive power outage that affected Ontario, Canada, and much of the northeastern United States. In this episode I reflect on where I was that day and some of my thoughts around that event, as well as what it means for complex systems. More information about the event can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northeast_blackout_of_2003

Video: IETF Chair Jari Arkko Summarizes The Activities of IETF 87 In Berlin (Featured Blog)

The 87th meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in Berlin, Germany, concluded on August 2, 2013. IETF Chair Jari Arkko recently published his summary of IETF 87 on the IETF Blog highlighting what he felt were some of the more important aspects of what was a very successful IETF meeting. I also had the privilege of interviewing Jari on video about the meeting. More...

FIR #716 – 8/12/13 – For Immediate Release

AirPR interview is up, marketing automation and Melbourne Mandate interviews coming, Bloggade 2013 is coming up; Quick news: promoted tweets boost offline sales, MixBit adds collaboration to Vine-Instagram competitor, top three tips from a LinkedIn expert, what consumers hate about social brands; Ragan promo; News That Fits: Google's new press release rules, Michael Netzley's Asia Report, how crooks are hijacking your Facebook likes, Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, executive email carpetbombinb a good reason for execs to go social, Dan York's report, how BBC kept the new Doctor Who a secret; music from New Mastersounds; and more.