February 2015 archive
Feb 27
TDYR 226 – Changing My Role At The Internet Society
Feb 27
Changing My Role At The Internet Society – Content Strategy Across All Areas
I'm excited about the new role!
It's only 3.5 years ago that I joined the Internet Society in September 2011. To understand why I joined "ISOC", as it is know by some, you need to go back and read my post about the big change then, but essentially, it came down to this:
I believe we are at a critical point where we have before us a choice of futures for the Internet - and we as a society need to understand those choices... and choose wisely!
3.5 years later I believe that even MORE firmly than I did then.
We need to fight for the open Internet! We need to make the right choices that will allow our children to have the "Internet of opportunity" that we've had the privilege of having... and we've got quite a struggle ahead!
Over the past 3.5 years my focus within the Internet Society has been primarily on the Deploy360 Programme, our project to accelerate the deployment and usage of critical Internet technologies such as IPv6, DNSSEC, TLS, and more. It's been an awesome opportunity. I built out the Deploy360 website ... set up all the WordPress-based systems so that we could rapidly create and distribute content... wrote probably 1,000 pieces of content... recorded videos and audio segments... spoke at our ION conferences all over the world... attended IETF and ICANN meetings... and met some of the most amazing and passionate people I've ever encountered!
Along the way, I've wound up doing a great bit of work with DNSSEC, aiming to help make the Domain Name System (DNS) more secure - and I'll actually be continuing all of this "DNSSEC coordination" work on into my new role.
As part of the Deployment and Operationalization (DO) Team, we've been out there telling the story of how these technologies and standards can make the Internet work better, be faster and be more secure. It's hard to know exactly how much impact we've had... but we've received a good number of messages from people thanking us for helping them. It's been great to see!
And it's been great to wake up each morning working for an organization with a very clear mission.
Along the way we've had a lot of conversations internally about how the Internet Society needs to tell its story better. We're a large organization with over 60,000 member and over 100 chapters spread out around the world. We don't have a huge staff (about 90 people globally) but we have a large community and ecosystem of volunteers and members. We have a lot of different parts and pieces (and hey, you can join, too)... and we've been working on a great number of activities around the world.
In 2015, we're aiming to focus a bit more - and to get better as an organization at telling our story and helping people understand the work we do and the challenges that we as a society and world face.
As part of that, we have a new head of our communications team, James Wood, to whom I'll now be reporting, and we have a great bit of other changes underway. It's an exciting time!
Effectively what I'll be doing is expanding my content creation beyond just the technology side of Internet Society work to also write about topics such as public policy - in fact I've already started that with posts such as my one about the fundamental tension between security and privacy and the series of posts I wrote from ICANN 52.
More than just writing, though, I'll be working with authors across our organization to have a better strategy so that we are consistently creating quality content and maximizing the distribution. We produce a lot of content... so this will be a challenging, but interesting, role!
I'll also be working on ensuring we as the Internet Society have on voice on new and emerging topics... being a bit more "forward-looking" than we've been in the past. (Which ties in nicely with my whole "view of the crow's nest" orientation).
And, as I mentioned, I'll still be focused around accelerating DNSSEC deployment around the world... so I'll still have a foot deep in the technology realm!
Content strategy, technology, writing, forward-looking thinking... all in the service of ensuring the Internet remains open for innovation and opportunity!
It's really a dream for me... the opportunity to be even more of a voice for the open Internet... and I'm looking forward to making it happen!
That's the news from here... and I do have to end with thanking my current manager of the DO Team, Chris Grundemann, and also Olaf Kolkmann, our Chief Internet Technology Officer (CITO), both of whom have been incredibly supportive of me moving into this new role. It's been great working for them - and now the good news is that I'll still be working with them!
P.S. And in truth, while the role officially starts on Monday, I'm actually going to be preparing for and then speaking at the NTEN conference in Austin, TX, next week (about our choice of Internet futures!)... and so the new role really won't get underway until the following week!
An audio commentary is also available at:
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Feb 27
Net Neutrality: Did We "Win" A Battle, Only To Possibly Lose The War?
WE DON'T KNOW WHAT THE FCC ACTUALLY VOTED ON!
"The other problem with rules is that they are brittle. Teams of lawyers will comb through whatever the FCC finally publishes and find any loopholes. There will be defined bright lines going forward and, make no mistake, ISPs will now get as close to those lines as they can. Whatever the Internet's rough consensus of "acceptable" was before, it's about to be thrown out in favor of a set of rules written by lawyers. Ironically, that may end up resulting in a regulated network that is less neutral than what we have today."
The Internet is NOT the telephone network. The Internet is NOT the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network).
You cannot apply the old rules of telecom to the new world of the Internet.
The Internet is NOT telecom. You cannot apply the old rules of telecom to the new world of the Internet.
The Internet is NOT telecom. Those are old rules - we are living in a new medium.
The Internet IS telecom. The old rules DO apply.
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Feb 27
WordPress iOS App Now Has WYSIWIG Visual Editor
Here is what it looked like before the change on my iPad - basically, it was just a raw HTML editor:
There was a preview mode that would let you see what it was going to look like, but all the writing was in HTML. No big deal if you are a long-time HTML coder like me... but probably not the most fun for newer writers - and the HTML markup is also distracting.
Here is what the new post-upgrade view is:
A much nicer view - and also some of the commonly-used features are more accessible. There's also the "HTML" button for those who want to get into the actual HTML code.
The WordPress.com blog post about the new iOS version gets into a few of the other features that the new app has. I do like the updates to the navigation. I haven't yet worked with the new image settings, but look forward to doing so.
Anyway, if you haven't yet upgraded the WordPress app on your iOS device, you may want to do so... and if you haven't tried the app in a while you may want to give it a new try.
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Feb 27
Speaking At NTEN 15NTC Conference In Austin About Our Choice Of Internet Futures
I'm delighted to be speaking next Wednesday, March 4, 2015, at the 2015 Nonprofit Technology Conference (NTC) in Austin, Texas, on the topic of "A Choice Of Internet Futures - Will Nonprofits Be Stuck In the Slow Lane?" The event, sponsored by the Nonprofit Technology Network (NTEN) will bring together over 2,000 people involved with nonprofit organizations around the world to learn and share information.
Feb 27
Main IETF Website Returns To Being DNSSEC Signed Via CloudFlare
Good news this week for DNSSEC and content-distribution-networks (CDNs)! Last year the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) decided to move the main IETF web site over to a CDN to speed up access to IETF web pages for people trying to reach them all over the world. While this sped up access to the IETF’s content, it unfortunately meant that the main IETF website had to lose its DNSSEC signature because the CDN vendor, CloudFlare, did not yet support DNSSEC. (I’d note that this was only the main IETF web site – other IETF web sites such as the datatracker and tools sites continued to be DNSSEC-signed.)
Those of us advocating for DNSSEC were naturally disappointed by this move last year, but we understood the need and also understood that CloudFlare was committed to bringing DNSSEC to their customers – and indeed we’ve been writing about CloudFlare’s journey towards DNSSEC.
So this week we were very pleased to see this announcement by IETF Chair Jari Arkko:
Some time ago we moved the static parts of the IETF web page to a CDN service. While this provided a significant improvements for page load times and retained our ability to serve the pages over IPv6, we were unable to provide DNSSEC for the web pages that were being served by the CDN.
Our CDN vendor, Cloudfare, however, has worked in the background to enable DNSSEC for their customers. They have now come back with a system that we have enabled for the IETF web pages. (Thank you Cloudfare, this was important!)
We plan to keep the new arrangement on at http://dnssec.ietf.org for a while before finally moving to this arrangement on http://www.ietf.org. Testing the new arrangement on dnssec.ietf.org would be appreciated!
Jari Arkko, IETF Chair
As noted, the main IETF website is NOT yet DNSSEC-signed at the regular “www.ietf.org” but is instead available with a DNSSEC signature at http://dnssec.ietf.org while everything is tested out.
Regardless, this is great news for DNSSEC, for the IETF … and also as a demonstration that CloudFlare’s implementation is obviously getting that much closer to being available!
Please do check out http://dnssec.ietf.org and give it any kind of DNSSEC-related tests that you can!
And if you haven’t gotten started with DNSSEC yet, please visit our Start Here page to find out how you can begin!
Feb 25
Verizon Wireless At 56% IPv6 In Latest World IPv6 Launch Measurements
Some amazing percentages of IPv6 deployment in the February 2015 World IPv6 Launch measurements. As I wrote about on the Deploy360 blog, Verizon Wireless now is showing 56% IPv6 deployment and T-Mobile USA just crossed over 50% IPv6.
If you read the notes on the bottom of the measurements page you can see that Google, Facebook, Akamai, LinkedIn and Yahoo! are all measuring the amount of the amount of IPv6 they are seeing to their sites and reporting that back to the World IPv6 Launch project.
The key point for application developers is that all those people on those networks will be able to natively connect over IPv6 – if your application works over IPv6.
And a reason for caring may be… speed!
If a network is deployed with IPv6 in the main network, as I understand T-Mobile USA has now done, then connections from IPv6 clients can do directly to IPv6 servers. But connections to legacy IPv4 services will need to go through a gateway. Gateways typically introduce some degree of latency / delay, even at a microscopic level.
If your application works with IPv6 then you won’t need to worry about any v6/v4 gateways with any potential delays.
The reality that these measurements show is that IPv6 is very real today – will your app work over IPv6?
P.S. the goal of this book is to help!
Feb 25
Verizon Wireless At 56% IPv6 In Latest World IPv6 Launch Measurements
Some amazing percentages of IPv6 deployment in the February 2015 World IPv6 Launch measurements. As I wrote about on the Deploy360 blog, Verizon Wireless now is showing 56% IPv6 deployment and T-Mobile USA just crossed over 50% IPv6.
If you read the notes on the bottom of the measurements page you can see that Google, Facebook, Akamai, LinkedIn and Yahoo! are all measuring the amount of the amount of IPv6 they are seeing to their sites and reporting that back to the World IPv6 Launch project.
The key point for application developers is that all those people on those networks will be able to natively connect over IPv6 – if your application works over IPv6.
And a reason for caring may be… speed!
If a network is deployed with IPv6 in the main network, as I understand T-Mobile USA has now done, then connections from IPv6 clients can do directly to IPv6 servers. But connections to legacy IPv4 services will need to go through a gateway. Gateways typically introduce some degree of latency / delay, even at a microscopic level.
If your application works with IPv6 then you won’t need to worry about any v6/v4 gateways with any potential delays.
The reality that these measurements show is that IPv6 is very real today – will your app work over IPv6?
P.S. the goal of this book is to help! 🙂
Feb 25
Google Finally Kills Off GoogleTalk and XMPP (Jabber) Integration
GoogleTalk is dead, Jim!
By way of a comment to a post I wrote back in May 2013 about Google seeming to kill off XMPP/Jabber support in Google+ Hangouts (spoiler: They did!), I learned from a friend that the GoogleTalk API was officially deprecated as of February 23, 2015. I confirmed this by finding a Google+ post from Google's Mayur Kamat.
Now, this is not a surprise. Google has been clear that Hangouts was the replacement and also that Hangouts does not support XMPP:
Still, I'm sad to see the XMPP integration die off. It is just a continuation of the descent of messaging services into walled gardens ... a topic I've been writing about for many years.
On that note, it was really no surprise to see the media reports about Microsoft killing off Google and Facebook chat support in its Outlook.com service. Microsoft made this Google integration available back in May 2013, but today Microsoft really has no choice:
- Google has killed off XMPP integration with Hangouts.
- Facebook has killed off XMPP integration with their new v2.0 API.
And so Microsoft can only offer Outlook.com its own proprietary walled garden... Skype!
Goodbye GoogleTalk and... sadly... goodbye XMPP integration!
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Feb 24
Today: Interop Radio – The Real Scoop on IPv6
Today seems to be the day for people to do webinars/podcasts on the topics we care about… in about 35 minutes at 3:00pm US Eastern, an episode of “Interop Radio” will focus on IPv6!
Hosted on BlogTalkRadio, this is the kind of show that anyone can call in to using the phone number listed on the episode page. From that page, the abstract is:
Everyone knows we’ve run out of network addresses. That’s old news. So why don’t we hear about the solutions any more? Is it a thoroughly solved problem or have we all just decided to ignore it until the problem goes away (or the Internet falls over and dies)?
In this episode of Interop Radio we’ll give you the answers and help you understand what those answers mean for your network. To do that we have an expert on board to talk about the technologies and practices that will make a difference for you and your organization.
Brandon Ross, Chief Network Architect and CEO at Network Utility Force, is a network architect and entrepreneur with years of experience building, operating and managing large scale service provider networks. He’s interested in helping telecommunications companies with the best network engineering team and network in the industry via scalable and stable architectures.
The episode records live in about 35 minutes – and then presumably will be available for later listening if you aren’t able to hear it live.
It’s great to see this kind of discussion happening out there – and with very real IPv6 deployment happening around the world, the time is NOW for you to be understanding how your networks and content can be available over IPv6!
We look forward to hearing this show and for seeing even more IPv6 deployment happen! If you want to get started with IPv6, please visit our Start Here page to find resources tailored to your role or type of organization!