March 2015 archive

Call For Participation – DNSSEC Workshop At ICANN 53 Buenos Aires

ICANN 53 LogoDo you have a great story to share about your DNSSEC implementation?  Do you have a new tool or service that makes DNSSEC or DANE easier to use or more automated? Do you have new measurements about DNSSEC deployment?  Have you found a new use for DANE?

Would you like to demo your new tool or service?   Do you have a case study you’d like to share?

We’re starting the call for participation for the ICANN 53 DNSSEC Workshop on Wednesday, June 24, 2015, at ICANN 53 in Buenos Aires, Argentina and we’d love to hear your ideas about what you would like to present.   If you will be at ICANN 53, or can get there, please do consider submitting a proposal.  You just need to send a sentence or two about your idea to:

dnssec-buenosaires@isoc.org

by Wednesday, 01 April 2015.

If you are looking for ideas for topics, we’ve listed a good number of sessions we’d like to hear about in the full Call for Participation below.  Consider these as starting points… we’re also interested in any other ideas you may have.  We typically have about 100 people participating from across the industry and the Workshops provide a great way to share information with others – and to get input/feedback on ideas and services you may have.

Please consider joining us!


Call for Participation — ICANN DNSSEC Workshop at ICANN 53 in Buenos Aires, Argentina

The DNSSEC Deployment Initiative and the Internet Society Deploy360 Programme, in cooperation with the ICANN Security and Stability Advisory Committee (SSAC), are planning a DNSSEC Workshop at the ICANN 53 meeting on 24 June 2015 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.  The DNSSEC Workshop has been a part of ICANN meetings for several years and has provided a forum for both experienced and new people to meet, present and discuss current and future DNSSEC deployments.  For reference, the most recent session was held at the ICANN meeting in Singapore on 11 February 2015. The presentations and transcripts are available at: http://singapore52.icann.org/en/schedule/wed-dnssec.

At ICANN 53 we are particularly interested in live demonstrations of uses of DNSSEC or DANE.  Examples might include:

  • Email clients and servers using DNSSEC/DANE for secure email.
  • Tools for automating the generation of DNSSEC/DANE records.
  • Services for monitoring or managing DNSSEC signing or validation.
  • Tools or services for using DNSSEC/DANE along with other existing protocols and services such as SSH, FTP or PGP/GPG.
  • Innovative uses of APIs to do something new and different using DNSSEC/DANE.

Our interest is to provide current examples of the state of development and to show real-world examples of how DNSSEC and DANE can be used to increase the overall security of the Internet.

We are open to presentations and demonstrations related to any topic associated with DNSSEC and DANE.  Examples of the types of topics we are seeking include:

1.  DNSSEC activities in Latin America

For this panel we are seeking participation from those who have been involved in DNSSEC deployment in Latin America and also from those who have not deployed DNSSEC but who have a keen interest in the challenges and benefits of deployment.  In particular, we will consider the following questions:  What can DNSSEC do for you? What doesn’t it do?  What are the internal tradeoffs to implementing DNSSEC? What did you learn in your deployment of DNSSEC?  We are interested in presentations from both people involved with the signing of domains and people involved with the deployment of DNSSEC-validating DNS resolvers.

2.  Potential impacts of Root Key Rollover

Given many concerns about the need to do a Root Key Rollover, we would like to bring together a panel of people who can talk about what the potential impacts may be to ISPs, equipment providers and end users, and also what can be done to potentially mitigate those issues. In particular, we are seeking participation from vendors, ISPs, and the community that will be affected by distribution of new root keys.  We would like to be able to offer suggestions out of this panel to the wider technical community.  If you have a specific concern about the Root Key Rollover, or believe you have a method or solution to help address impacts, we would like to hear from you.

3.  New gTLD registries and administrators implementing DNSSEC

With the launch of the new gTLDs, we are interested in hearing from registries and operators of new gTLDs about what systems and processes they have implemented to support DNSSEC.  As more gTLDs are launched, is there DNSSEC-related information that can be shared to help those launches go easier?

4.  Guidance for Registrars in supporting DNSSEC

The 2013 Registrar Accreditation Agreement (RAA) for registrars and resellers requires them to support DNSSEC from  January 1, 2014. We are seeking presentations discussing:

  • What are the specific technical requirements of the RAA and how can registrars meet those requirements?
  • What tools and systems are available for registrars that include DNSSEC support?
  • What information do registrars need to provide to resellers and ultimately customers?

We are particularly interested in hearing from registrars who have signed the 2013 RAA and have either already implemented DNSSEC support or have a plan for doing so.

5.  Implementing DNSSEC validation at Internet Service Providers (ISPs)

Internet Service Providers (ISPs) play a critical role by enabling DNSSEC validation for the caching DNS resolvers used by their customers.  We have now seen massive rollouts of DNSSEC validation within large North American ISPs and at ISPs around the world.  We are interested in presentations on topics such as:

  • What does an ISP need to do to prepare its network for implementing DNSSEC validation?
  • How does an ISP need to prepare its support staff and technical staff for the rollout of DNSSEC validation?
  • What measurements are available about the degree of DNSSEC validation currently deployed?
  • What tools are available to help an ISP deploy DNSSEC validation?
  • What are the practical server-sizing impacts of enabling DNSSEC validation on ISP DNS Resolvers (ex. cost, memory, CPU, bandwidth, technical support, etc.)?

6. The operational realities of running DNSSEC

Now that DNSSEC has become an operational norm for many registries, registrars, and ISPs, what have we learned about how we manage DNSSEC? What is the best practice around key rollovers? How often do you review your disaster recovery procedures? Is there operational familiarity within your customer support teams? What operational statistics have we gathered about DNSSEC? Are there experiences being documented in the form of best practices, or something similar, for transfer of signed zones?

7.  DNSSEC automation

For DNSSEC to reach massive deployment levels it is clear that a higher level of automation is required than is currently available. Topics for which we would like to see presentations include:

  • What tools, systems and services are available to help automate DNSSEC key management?
  • Can you provide an analysis of current tools/services and identify gaps?
  • Where are the best opportunities for automation within DNSSEC signing and validation processes?
  • What are the costs and benefits of different approaches to automation?

8.  When unexpected DNSSEC events occur

What have we learned from some of the operational outages that we have seen over the past 18 months? Are there lessons that we can pass on to those just about to implement DNSSEC? How do you manage dissemination of information about the outage? What have you learned about communications planning? Do you have a route to ISPs and registrars? How do you liaise with your CERT community?

9.  DANE and DNSSEC applications

There is strong interest for DANE usage within web transactions as well as for securing email and Voice-over-IP (VoIP). We are seeking presentations on topics such as:

  • What are some of the new and innovative uses of DANE and other DNSSEC applications in new areas or industries?
  • What tools and services are now available that can support DANE usage?
  • How soon could DANE and other DNSSEC applications become a deployable reality?
  • How can the industry use DANE and other DNSSEC applications as a mechanism for creating a more secure Internet?

We would be particularly interested in any live demonstrations of DNSSEC / DANE applications and services.  For example, a demonstration of the actual process of setting up a site with a certificate stored in a TLSA record that correctly validates would be welcome.  Demonstrations of new tools that make the setup of DNSSEC or DANE more automated would also be welcome.

10.  DNSSEC and DANE in the enterprise

Enterprises can play a critical role in both providing DNSSEC validation to their internal networks and also through signing of the domains owned by the enterprise. We are seeking presentations from enterprises that have implemented DNSSEC on validation and/or signing processes and can address questions such as:

  • What are the benefits to enterprises of rolling out DNSSEC validation? And how do they do so?
  • What are the challenges to deployment for these organizations and how could DANE and other DNSSEC applications address those challenges?
  • How should an enterprise best prepare its IT staff and network to implement DNSSEC?
  • What tools and systems are available to assist enterprises in the deployment of DNSSEC?
  • How can the DANE protocol be used within an enterprise to bring a higher level of security to transactions using SSL/TLS certificates?

11. Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) use cases and innovation

We are interested in demonstrations of HSMs, presentations of HSM-related innovations and real world use cases of HSMs and key management.

In addition, we welcome suggestions for additional topics.

If you are interested in participating, please send a brief (1-2 sentence) description of your proposed presentation to dnssec-buenosaires@isoc.org by Wednesday, 01 April 2015

We hope that you can join us.

Thank you,

Julie Hedlund

On behalf of the DNSSEC Workshop Program Committee:
Mark Elkins, DNS/ZACR
Cath Goulding, Nominet UK
Jean Robert Hountomey, AfricaCERT
Jacques Latour, .CA
Xiaodong Lee, CNNIC
Luciano Minuchin, NIC.AR
Russ Mundy, Parsons
Ondřej Surý, CZ.NIC
Yoshiro Yoneya, JPRS
Dan York, Internet Society

Call for Participation – ICANN 53 DNSSEC Workshop in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 24 June 2015

ICANN 53 LogoDo you have a great story to share about your DNSSEC implementation?  Do you have a new tool or service that makes DNSSEC or DANE easier to use or more automated?  Would you like to demo your new tool or service?   Do you have a case study you’d like to share?

We’re starting the call for participation for the ICANN 53 DNSSEC Workshop on Wednesday, June 24, 2015, at ICANN 53 in Buenos Aires, Argentina and we’d love to hear your ideas about what you would like to present.   If you will be at ICANN 53, or can get there, please do consider submitting a proposal.  You just need to send a sentence or two about your idea to:

dnssec-buenosaires@isoc.org

by Wednesday, 01 April 2015.    If you are looking for ideas for topics, we’ve listed a good number of sessions we’d like to hear about in the full Call for Participation below.  Consider these as starting points… we’re also interested in any other ideas you may have.  We typically have about 100 people participating from across the industry and the Workshops provide a great way to share information with others – and to get input/feedback on ideas and services you may have.

Please consider joining us!


 

Call for Participation — ICANN DNSSEC Workshop at ICANN 53 in Buenos Aires, Argentina

The DNSSEC Deployment Initiative and the Internet Society Deploy360 Programme, in cooperation with the ICANN Security and Stability Advisory Committee (SSAC), are planning a DNSSEC Workshop at the ICANN 53 meeting on 24 June 2015 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.  The DNSSEC Workshop has been a part of ICANN meetings for several years and has provided a forum for both experienced and new people to meet, present and discuss current and future DNSSEC deployments.  For reference, the most recent session was held at the ICANN meeting in Singapore on 11 February 2015. The presentations and transcripts are available at: http://singapore52.icann.org/en/schedule/wed-dnssec.

At ICANN 53 we are particularly interested in live demonstrations of uses of DNSSEC or DANE.  Examples might include:

  • Email clients and servers using DNSSEC/DANE for secure email.
  • Tools for automating the generation of DNSSEC/DANE records.
  • Services for monitoring or managing DNSSEC signing or validation.
  • Tools or services for using DNSSEC/DANE along with other existing protocols and services such as SSH, FTP or PGP/GPG.
  • Innovative uses of APIs to do something new and different using DNSSEC/DANE.

Our interest is to provide current examples of the state of development and to show real-world examples of how DNSSEC and DANE can be used to increase the overall security of the Internet.

We are open to presentations and demonstrations related to any topic associated with DNSSEC and DANE.  Examples of the types of topics we are seeking include:

1.  DNSSEC activities in Latin America

For this panel we are seeking participation from those who have been involved in DNSSEC deployment in Latin America and also from those who have not deployed DNSSEC but who have a keen interest in the challenges and benefits of deployment.  In particular, we will consider the following questions:  What can DNSSEC do for you? What doesn’t it do?  What are the internal tradeoffs to implementing DNSSEC? What did you learn in your deployment of DNSSEC?  We are interested in presentations from both people involved with the signing of domains and people involved with the deployment of DNSSEC-validating DNS resolvers.

2.  Potential impacts of Root Key Rollover

Given many concerns about the need to do a Root Key Rollover, we would like to bring together a panel of people who can talk about what the potential impacts may be to ISPs, equipment providers and end users, and also what can be done to potentially mitigate those issues. In particular, we are seeking participation from vendors, ISPs, and the community that will be affected by distribution of new root keys.  We would like to be able to offer suggestions out of this panel to the wider technical community.  If you have a specific concern about the Root Key Rollover, or believe you have a method or solution to help address impacts, we would like to hear from you.

3.  New gTLD registries and administrators implementing DNSSEC

With the launch of the new gTLDs, we are interested in hearing from registries and operators of new gTLDs about what systems and processes they have implemented to support DNSSEC.  As more gTLDs are launched, is there DNSSEC-related information that can be shared to help those launches go easier?

4.  Guidance for Registrars in supporting DNSSEC

The 2013 Registrar Accreditation Agreement (RAA) for registrars and resellers requires them to support DNSSEC from  January 1, 2014. We are seeking presentations discussing:
* What are the specific technical requirements of the RAA and how can registrars meet those requirements?
* What tools and systems are available for registrars that include DNSSEC support?
* What information do registrars need to provide to resellers and ultimately customers?

We are particularly interested in hearing from registrars who have signed the 2013 RAA and have either already implemented DNSSEC support or have a plan for doing so.

5.  Implementing DNSSEC validation at Internet Service Providers (ISPs)

Internet Service Providers (ISPs) play a critical role by enabling DNSSEC validation for the caching DNS resolvers used by their customers.  We have now seen massive rollouts of DNSSEC validation within large North American ISPs and at ISPs around the world.  We are interested in presentations on topics such as:
* What does an ISP need to do to prepare its network for implementing DNSSEC validation?
* How does an ISP need to prepare its support staff and technical staff for the rollout of DNSSEC validation?
* What measurements are available about the degree of DNSSEC validation currently deployed?
* What tools are available to help an ISP deploy DNSSEC validation?
* What are the practical server-sizing impacts of enabling DNSSEC validation on ISP DNS Resolvers (ex. cost, memory, CPU, bandwidth, technical support, etc.)?

6. The operational realities of running DNSSEC

Now that DNSSEC has become an operational norm for many registries, registrars, and ISPs, what have we learned about how we manage DNSSEC? What is the best practice around key rollovers? How often do you review your disaster recovery procedures? Is there operational familiarity within your customer support teams? What operational statistics have we gathered about DNSSEC? Are there experiences being documented in the form of best practices, or something similar, for transfer of signed zones?

7.  DNSSEC automation

For DNSSEC to reach massive deployment levels it is clear that a higher level of automation is required than is currently available. Topics for which we would like to see presentations include:
* What tools, systems and services are available to help automate DNSSEC key management?
* Can you provide an analysis of current tools/services and identify gaps?
* Where are the best opportunities for automation within DNSSEC signing and validation processes?
* What are the costs and benefits of different approaches to automation?

8.  When unexpected DNSSEC events occur

What have we learned from some of the operational outages that we have seen over the past 18 months? Are there lessons that we can pass on to those just about to implement DNSSEC? How do you manage dissemination of information about the outage? What have you learned about communications planning? Do you have a route to ISPs and registrars? How do you liaise with your CERT community?

9.  DANE and DNSSEC applications

There is strong interest for DANE usage within web transactions as well as for securing email and Voice-over-IP (VoIP). We are seeking presentations on topics such as:
* What are some of the new and innovative uses of DANE and other DNSSEC applications in new areas or industries?
* What tools and services are now available that can support DANE usage?
* How soon could DANE and other DNSSEC applications become a deployable reality?
* How can the industry use DANE and other DNSSEC applications as a mechanism for creating a more secure Internet?

We would be particularly interested in any live demonstrations of DNSSEC / DANE applications and services.  For example, a demonstration of the actual process of setting up a site with a certificate stored in a TLSA record that correctly validates would be welcome.  Demonstrations of new tools that make the setup of DNSSEC or DANE more automated would also be welcome.

10.  DNSSEC and DANE in the enterprise

Enterprises can play a critical role in both providing DNSSEC validation to their internal networks and also through signing of the domains owned by the enterprise. We are seeking presentations from enterprises that have implemented DNSSEC on validation and/or signing processes and can address questions such as:
* What are the benefits to enterprises of rolling out DNSSEC validation? And how do they do so?
* What are the challenges to deployment for these organizations and how could DANE and other DNSSEC applications address those challenges?
* How should an enterprise best prepare its IT staff and network to implement DNSSEC?
* What tools and systems are available to assist enterprises in the deployment of DNSSEC?
* How can the DANE protocol be used within an enterprise to bring a higher level of security to transactions using SSL/TLS certificates?

11. Hardware Security Modules (HSMs) use cases and innovation

We are interested in demonstrations of HSMs, presentations of HSM-related innovations and real world use cases of HSMs and key management.

In addition, we welcome suggestions for additional topics.

If you are interested in participating, please send a brief (1-2 sentence) description of your proposed presentation to dnssec-buenosaires@isoc.org by **Wednesday, 01 April 2015**

We hope that you can join us.

Thank you,

Julie Hedlund

On behalf of the DNSSEC Workshop Program Committee:
Mark Elkins, DNS/ZACR
Cath Goulding, Nominet UK
Jean Robert Hountomey, AfricaCERT
Jacques Latour, .CA
Xiaodong Lee, CNNIC
Luciano Minuchin, NIC.AR
Russ Mundy, Parsons
Ondřej Surý, CZ.NIC
Yoshiro Yoneya, JPRS
Dan York, Internet Society

TDYR 229 – Analysis of the HBO NOW DNSSEC Error That Caused Problems With Comcast And Google

TDYR 229 - Analysis of the HBO NOW DNSSEC Error That Caused Problems With Comcast And Google by Dan York

HBO NOW DNSSEC Misconfiguration Makes Site Unavailable From Comcast Networks (Fixed Now)

Wow! Talking about insanely bad timing…  yesterday at Apple’s big event, HBO announced “HBO NOW”, a new streaming service available for only $15/month that will give you access to all HBO’s content.  This was great news for those people who want to “cut the cord” and not have to pay for a cable TV subscription to get content such as this from HBO. All you had to do was go to order.hbonow.com to get started.

One slight problem – the folks at HBO had signed the hbonow.com domain with DNSSEC, but had not done so correctly!

As a result, the many networks around the world that perform DNSSEC validation to ensure that customers are getting to the correct sites (versus being redirected to bogus sites for phishing or malware) were blocking customers from getting to the possibly bogus order.hbonow.com!

In the text below, I will:

  • Explain what appears to have happened with HBO’s misconfiguration of the hbonow.com domain.
  • Provide two examples confirming what seems to have happened.
  • Speculate on why this occurred.
  • Offer some suggestions on what we need to do next.

Comcast (and Google’s Public DNS) Blocks HBOnow.com

One of those networks here in the USA performing DNSSEC validation was, of course, Comcast (and they have been doing so since January 2012), who is both the largest Internet Service Provider (ISP) in North America and also the largest cable TV provider.  They also own NBCUniversal and create their own video content. So of course the immediate reaction was for people to take to Twitter and blame Comcast:

But here’s the thing:

Comcast was CORRECT in blocking HBO’s site!

Because:

  1. The .COM top-level domain (TLD) had a DS record indicating that the hbonow.com site was signed with DNSSEC.
  2. The hbonow.com domain did NOT have the corresponding DNSKEY record.
  3. Comcast’s DNSSEC-validating DNS resolvers identified the problem and blocked access to the site on the assumption that this could have been an attacker attempting to redirect people to an unsigned and potentially bogus website.

DNSSEC worked correctly to prevent people from going to a bogus site.

Unfortunately, the DNS records were “bogus” not because of an attacker but rather because of a misconfiguration on HBO’s end.

This is not the first time Comcast has dealt with a site with misconfigured DNS records.  If you remember back to 2012 there was the issue with NASA.GOV, which turned out to be a problem with the changing of DNSSEC keys.  Comcast and NASA provided a detailed explanation of what happened then.  (And in another case of spectacularly bad timing, the outage occurred on the day of the SOPA/PIPA website protests, leading then to charges on Twitter that Comcast was deliberately blocking sites.)

UPDATE: I’ve had people tell me they also couldn’t get to the HBO NOW site on networks that use Google’s Public DNS Servers as their DNS resolvers – which makes sense because Google has been performing full DNSSEC validation on sites since May 2013.  (I just did not see anyone tweeting about this…)

HBO’s “Solution”

HBO has seemed to “fix” this issue by, unfortunately, simply removing DNSSEC records and returning the domain to a completely unsigned / unprotected state.   Once the incorrect DNS records age out of DNS resolver caches (based on their Time-To-Live (TTL)), or if the DNS resolver caches are flushed of the current records, then the domain will resolve correctly and people will be able to get to the site.

I’ll speculate on what happened in a moment… but here is some confirmation of what occurred.

Confirmation Using DNSViz

Last night on Twitter, Jason Livingood, VP of Internet Services for Comcast (and also, in full disclosure, a member of the Internet Society Board of Trustees as well as a long-time participant in IETF standards activities), tweeted out a DNSViz analysis of the order.hbonow.com domain (click/tap image for larger version):

DNSViz status of order.hbonow.comIt shows in there that there is a DS record for “hbonow.com” that points to a DNSKEY record with the id 51249.  However, that DNSKEY record does not exist in the actual DNS records for “hbonow.com”.

This is why the failure occurred.

When I look at DNSViz right now for the domain, the picture is different:

DNSViz of order.hbonow.comThere is no DS record for hbonow.com and so there is no DNSSEC failure.

Confirmation Using Dig

On my own home office network, I (of course!) use a DNSSEC-validating resolver and found myself unable to get to the order.hbonow.com site.  Last night when reviewing the news about the Apple event presumably somewhere in there my DNS resolver pulled the DNS records for hbonow.com (perhaps due to web browser “pre-fetching”) and so the old records are in my DNS resolver’s cache.  When I go to a command-line and type “dig +dnssec ds hbonow.com”, I get back the following:

;; QUESTION SECTION:
;hbonow.com. IN DS
;; ANSWER SECTION:
hbonow.com. 10697 IN DS 51249 7 1 90DC90D0578FCFDDF6ED5DE0B35E9652CD2396A8
hbonow.com. 10697 IN RRSIG DS 8 2 86400 20150315045041 20150308044041 13787 com. NAY+BNRi4c6rzLOyoFN4OPOGbbUFuDu/kfO37m00pKkSwXxhAa0qkTTQ HIvzeaFPY54hdJlqH1EzdUEDuL2Nz2stv7iQmsakBaHf3fjHpe2L9H4C Q+wk8yc1vmHdcaUhJyuWYalLwJqg8GWmCXUzWAc6JAoZTPOzF4yZkshp unE=

If you notice the “51249” in the first line of the “ANSWER” section, that matches up with what was shown in the first DNSViz image above as the ID of the DNSKEY that is missing.

When I connect into a system on another and perform the same dig command, I get a different response:

;; QUESTION SECTION:
;hbonow.com. IN ANY

There was no answer section, which means there is no DS record.  If I were on that network I would be able to get to the order.hbonow.com site.

The Time-To-Live (TTL) Issue

If you look back at those responses from my network, you will see the “10697” in the answer section.  This is the number of seconds that the record will remain in the cache of my DNSSEC resolver.  In the time it has taken me to write this post, that number is now down to “5224”  – so about 87 minutes left until that record ages out and my system will stop blocking access to the site.

In Comcast’s case, Jason tweeted out that they flushed the caches on their DNS resolvers and so people should have been able to get to the site right after that.   In my case, I logged into the web admin menu for my home server/gateway and clicked the button to flush the cache… but that didn’t seem to work (and so I’m going to be raising a ticket with the software distribution).

For others out there, they still may be unable to get to order.hbonow.com until the TTL expires in the cache of their DNS resolvers.

Speculation On What Happened

Judging from all of this, here is my guess as to what happened.

1. At some point, HBO signed the domain with DNSSEC. The name server (NS) records indicated that the authoritative DNS servers for hbonow.com are at Dyn’s “DynECT” Managed DNS Service.  DynECT provides a way to very easily sign your domain. I use this service myself for several of my personal domains.  You check a couple of boxes and Dyn takes care of all the signing and re-signing for you.  It has worked well for me.

2. A DS Record was uploaded to the .COM TLD. To tie the domain into the “global chain-of-trust” of DNSSEC, a DS record had to be uploaded to the .COM registry.  This DS record provides a fingerprint (a hash) of the DNSKEY record used to sign the domain.   Unfortunately, right now the only way to transmit a DS record to the .COM registry is through the registrar where you registered the domain name.  I know from personal experience that this involves a manual copy-and-paste of the DS Record from Dyn’s web management interface into my registrar’s web management interface.

Next I think either one of two things happened:

3a. The DNSKEY was updated (rolled over) but the DS record at the .COM registry was NOT updated.  Within DNSSEC, a Key Signing Key (KSK) is set to expire at a certain date and time.  Services operated by DNS operators like Dyn will automagically generate new keys and re-sign the zone. In doing so, the DNS operator will also generate a new DS record.  However, there is no automated way for a DNS operator to get the new DS record to the TLD registry.  (This is something the industry is discussing right now!)

Given that I’m not finding any other DNSSEC-signed records in the cache of my local DNS resolver, I think the answer may more likely be…

3b. HBO decided to remove DNSSEC signing, but forgot to remove the DS record from the .COM registry.  Someone at HBO may have decided to remove the DNSSEC signing from the domain.  Perhaps the signing was just an experiment by someone on the IT team.  Or perhaps someone decided to remove the DNSSEC signatures in advance of the launch so that there was one less variable during the huge launch with Apple.

But… in removing the DNSSEC signatures they forgot to remove the DS record from the .COM registry.

Again, this goes to the manual nature of this process.  Someone could have very easily gone into Dyn’s web management interface and un-checked the box for DNSSEC signing.  Easy. Simple. Done.

But they would also have to login to the registrar’s web management interface and remove the DS record. This may have been the step that someone forgot.

The problem here is that:

  • IF a DS record EXISTS in a TLD;
  • AND the corresponding DNSKEY record does NOT exist in a domain;
  • THEN an attacker could be trying to substitute in an unsigned set of DNS records.

This is exactly the kind of “attack” that DNSSEC is designed to prevent!

Unfortunately, HBO seems to have “attacked themselves” by missing a step in the operations of DNSSEC.

What Next?

This failure last night really speaks to the hole we have in the DNSSEC signing process where there is no easy way for a DNS Operator who is NOT the registrar to update the TLD registry with the new records.  The failure here is because of the manual cut-and-paste process that must be currently used.    I wrote about this in a post:

which in turn pointed over to Olafur Gudmundsson’s post on CloudFlare’s blog:

If we look at the steps of DNSSEC signing today, they look like:

DNSSEC Signing Steps

The challenge we have is to somehow improve the communication between the DNS Operators and the Registries.

In the HBO NOW case, if you go back to my speculation, either of two things could have happened with better automation:

1. The DNS Operator could have updated the registry with a new DS record. If the issue was my “3a” above where there was a key rollover without an update to the DS record, the DNS Operator (Dyn in this case) could have updated the .COM registry with the new DS record.

2. The DNS Operator could have signaled the registry to remove the DS record. If the issue was my “3b” where HBO turned off DNSSEC signing, the DNS operator (Dyn) could have signaled the registry to remove the DS record.

We need to fix this!

We need to have better automation here so that these kind of manual issues do not cause failures in the DNSSEC validation process.

If you’d like to help, there is a public mailing list set up for anyone who is interested.  You can join the effort and subscribe at:

https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/listinfo/dnssec-auto-ds

This work will be ongoing for quite some time and will probably wind up in the DNSOP Working Group within the IETF.  It’s a critically important challenge we need to address to bring further automation to DNSSEC deployment and help many more people secure their domains.

Meanwhile, we’ll have to wait to perhaps get some more official news out of Comcast and or HBO… but this appears to be what happened last night.

Comments, suggestions, feedback or disagreements with my analysis are all welcome as comments!

And… if you want to get started with DNSSEC, please do visit our Start Here page to begin.


Other potential discussions of this post:

Suggestions For An Editorial Calendar Tool/Service? (For Content Strategy)

Editorial calendarWhat kind of tools or services have you found most useful for maintaining an "editorial calendar" for the content creation your organization does? What have you found helps you best plan out your content strategy?

For the last 3.5 years at the Internet Society, I've been using the insanely awesome EditFlow plugin for WordPress to plan out the content we've been creating on our Deploy360 website. EditFlow is an amazing amount of awesomeness bundled into one plugin... and if you use WordPress and aren't yet using EditFlow, I'd strongly recommend you check it out!

But here's the thing - in my new role within the Internet Society looking at content strategy across all our different sites and channels, I need a tool that lets our team plan:

  • content across several different websites we maintain
  • content on external websites (ex. CircleID)
  • content in social channels
  • different types of content (ex. blog posts, articles, videos)

Unfortunately I can't easily do this within WordPress. Yes, I could create a dummy "site" on a WordPress server and then use EditFlow as a tracking tool... but that would be a bit of the proverbial square-peg-in-round-hole.

Here's what I love about EditFlow and use on a daily basis:

  • Convenient calendar view - with filters - I can just go into Dashboard -> Calendar and I've immediately go a view into everything we've published and everything we have planned. I can filter the view to see only items based on:
    • Status (ex. published, draft, idea)
    • Category (topic)
    • Author
    • Post type (ex. blog post, resource page)
  • Drag-and-drop re-ordering - One of the single biggest features we'll use is the ability to just drag unpublished content around in the calendar view. When we have our weekly editorial calendar meetings, we will look at what is being planned and just move things around if we need to do. Super simple and easy.
  • Fast creation of new ideas - In those meetings as we talk about what content we want to create, we can just click a "+" button and add a new story idea directly into the calendar interface. (In the background it creates a draft WordPress post scheduled for the relevant day.)
  • Easy deletion of content - Similarly, if we decide to cancel an idea, we can just trash it from the calendar.
  • Story Budget - EditFlow also has another view that it calls the "Story Budget" where I can easily see over a given time period how many pieces of content were created for any given category. On a site where we write about many different topics, this is an easy way to see how balanced we are across the different topics. Similar to the calendar view there are many ways to filter the view.

    Storybudget

  • Multi-user - EditFlow works well because we can give access to as many people as we want (and you can control who has access) - they just need to have an account on our WordPress server. Our team simply logs into the server from wherever they are in the world and we walk through what we have planned for the week. After we move items or create new items, people need to refresh their browser view - but that's it. It works really, really well.

Now, we don't even use the editorial comments, editorial metadata, notifications and user groups that are part of EditFlow. Our Deploy360 team is small enough (4 people) that we haven't yet really needed those capabilities.

But now I'm looking for something with those kind of capabilities that can be used by our larger Communications team and also other people across the organization. I'm NOT necessarily looking for something that will connect to our various publishing platforms. I'm okay if there is simply a way to check off that an item has been published.

Any suggestions or ideas? Some searching around online has shown me DivvyHQ, which is a hosted service that looks from the YouTube videos like it will meet many of what I've listed above. (Not sure about the "categories"... but I think that may fit into their "calendars".)

Other suggestions for hosted services? Suggestions for software we'd host ourselves?

(Thanks in advance - and I'll plan to summarize what I learn in a future post.)


View a discussion on this topic at:


Suggestions So Far


UPDATE: I'd also love it if the service/tool had some of the kinds of content creation statistics I wrote about desiring earlier.


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Middle East DNS Forum Covers DNSSEC – Let’s Fill In The Map!

Over in Amman, Jordon, today our Internet Society colleague Frédéric Donck gave a keynote address at the Middle East DNS Forum where I know he was planning to speak about DNSSEC and our interest in advancing the deployment so that together we can make the Internet more secure via a more secure DNS infrastructure. (His talk was also going to cover Internet governance and infrastructure development topics.)  The folks at the Middle East DNS Forum were kind enough to tweet out a photo of Frédéric in action:

Middle East DNS Forum

In preparation for his presentation at the meeting, I provided Frédéric with a snapshot of our weekly DNSSEC Deployment Maps for the Middle East region (the colors represent the 5 stages of DNSSEC deployment):

dnssec-middle-east-march2015

As you can see, there’s definitely room to have more of the country-code top-level domains (ccTLDs) signed in the region.  From what the database shows, I have this information:

  • Lebanon has signed .LB and the DS record is in the root of DNS.
  • Afghanistan has signed .AF and the DS record is in the root of DNS.
  • Turkey (.TR) is “Announced” because a representative of the registry contacted me with their plans ( and they publicly announced their plans at the ICANN Turkey DNS Forum in November 2014).
  • Israel is in the “Announced” state because a representative of the .IL registry contacted me with their plans.
  • Iraq (.IQ) and Iran (.IR) are in “Experimental” because activity was observed a few years back.

For Lebanon and Afghanistan, they could be in the “Operational” stage and be accepting DS records from domain registrants.  We just don’t know because we have no way to find out unless either: 1) someone from the registry tells us (and I haven’t yet tried to contact these ccTLDs to know); or 2) someone who has registered a domain in those ccTLDs lets us know.

Although the agenda of the Middle East DNS Forum is mostly not about technical topics, I do hope Frédéric’s discussion will ignite some interest and we can start seeing the Middle East region joining the rest of the world in providing a way to secure the integrity of DNS information within the ccTLDs.

In fact, if you are visiting our site as a result of that Forum, please do visit our Start Here page to find out how you can begin with DNSSEC – or please contact us so that we can help you find the appropriate resources.

Let’s fill in that map and get the whole region to be green!

P.S. If anyone has more information about the DNSSEC deployment status of ccTLDs in that region, please do let me know – I’d be glad to update the maps.

FIR #798 – 3/09/15 – For Immediate Release

Quick News: Vodafone offers 16-week maternity leave globally, Google+ will uncouple photos and communication from streams, Sprinklr introduces Content Lifecycle Management, podcasts are the next frontier for PR according to Richard Edelman; Ragan promo; News That Fits: Experience marketing is the new normal, Michael Netzley's Asia report, the evolving role of PR and what you are going to do about it; Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, communications and ISIS; music from Pretty Visitors; and more.

FIR #798 – 3/09/15 – For Immediate Release

Quick News: Vodafone offers 16-week maternity leave globally, Google+ will uncouple photos and communication from streams, Sprinklr introduces Content Lifecycle Management, podcasts are the next frontier for PR according to Richard Edelman; Ragan promo; News That Fits: Experience marketing is the new normal, Michael Netzley's Asia report, the evolving role of PR and what you are going to do about it; Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, communications and ISIS; music from Pretty Visitors; and more.

TDYR 228 – Thoughts on Leaving NTEN 15NTC In Austin

TDYR 228 - Thoughts on Leaving NTEN 15NTC In Austin by Dan York

TDYR 227 – Some Thoughts About #NTEN #15NTC – Sessions And Overview

I'm in Austin, TX, at the NTEN 2015 Nonprofit Technology Conference this week - http://myntc.nten.org/home - and in this episode I talk about some of the sessions I've been in, including the session I led.