Dan York

Just a guy in Vermont trying to connect all the dots...

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Congrats on 25 Years of RIPE Meetings – And We’ll Be Promoting Videos From RIPE68

ripe-25-anniversaryAs the RIPE 68 meeting has drawn to a close in Warsaw, Poland, we would just like to take a moment to join with our CEO and many others in congratulating the RIPE community on their 25th anniversary.  Over these past 25 years the RIPE community has done an amazing amount of work together to create a stronger and better Internet.  On a global level, we are all collectively so much better off because of all the work that has happened within the RIPE community. Do check out their “25 Years of RIPE Timeline” to learn more.

We heard from Chris Grundemann and Jan Žorž that the 25th anniversary celebration on Tuesday evening was a great event – and both of them have raved about what an excellent – and exhausting – week this has been for them. As we wrote about last week, they’ve had an extremely busy week with a great amount of activity on IPv6, DNSSEC, securing BGP and our BCOP and  Operators and the IETF projects. Outside of that, Jan is also a member of the RIPE Program Committee (and was chosen again for that role) and so he was super-busy with helping with general organizational issues.  Our colleague Andrei Robachevsky was also there being very active on issues around routing resiliency and some of the great work happening there.

One of the great things about the RIPE meetings is how quickly they make the videos and presentations available for viewing.  There were some outstanding presentations at this RIPE 68 meeting in Warsaw, and so we’ll be highlighting and promoting some of the sessions that we found most valuable and interesting.  We’ve already started this yesterday with a post about Chris’ presentation about operators and the IETF, but we’ll be doing more of that over the next few weeks.

Congrats again to the RIPE community on their 25th anniversary - and we look forward to seeing all that will happen over the next 25 years!

Video: Chris Grundemann on our “Operators and the IETF” Project (RIPE 68)

What is our “Operators and the IETF” project all about?  Why should you care?  How can you help?  Chris Grundemann is in Warsaw this week at the RIPE 68 meeting and the video is now available (as are his slides) of his lightning talk:

ripe68-grundemann-operatorsIf you are interested in helping more, please check out our project page – and take the online survey! Thanks!

 

 

Andorra (.AD) Becomes The Latest ccTLD Signed With DNSSEC

Andorra flagYesterday the small Principality of Andorra became the latest country-code top-level domain (ccTLD) to be signed with DNSSEC.  From this point forward any domains registered under .AD will be able to receive the higher level of protection provided by DNSSEC and start being able to use innovative new tools like the DANE protocol… well, to be clear, all of that added protection can come as soon as the registry operating the .AD ccTLD starts accepting DS records from domain name registrars.  What we know today (from sites like this one) is that there is now a DS record for .AD in the root zone of DNS.

I will admit that when I heard the news I wasn’t quite sure where Andorra was other than recalling vaguely it was a very small European state.  The Internet filled in that knowledge gap, of course, with long entries in both Wikipedia and the World Fact Book informing me that Andorra is a “micro-state” sandwiched in between France and Spain whose population is around 85,000 people and whose official language is Catalan.  It seems to have a fascinating political structure as it is a monarchy with two co-princes, one of whom is the President of France and the other is the Spanish/Roman Catholic Bishop of Urgell.  (Yes, I got a bit distracted this morning by my curiosity about Andorra…)

Anyway, congratulations to Andorra for the DNSSEC-signing of .AD.  It will now be added to the database for the weekly DNSSEC Deployment Maps that will come out on Monday. It’s great to see the continued increase in the number of signed TLDs!

Thank You, Leslie Daigle, For All You Have Done For The Internet

Leslie Daigle, Chief Internet Technology OfficerA few years ago, our Chief Internet Technology Officer (CITO), Leslie Daigle, was frustrated by the fact that the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) was creating excellent Internet standards… but those standards weren’t being deployed by the network operators whose networks make up the Internet nor used by the content providers, developers, and others who provide services over the Internet.  Her question was:

How do we get critical IETF standards deployed and used in the daily operations of the Internet?

That line of thinking led to Leslie’s creation of the “Deployment and Operationalization (DO)” team within the Internet Society in 2011 and to the creation of the Deploy360 Programme of which this web portal is a major part. Leslie was involved in hiring all of us on the DO team and in guiding the vision of what Deploy360 would become. Mostly, too, she gave us the mandate to make this program happen and encouraged us to do whatever we needed to do to get the site online and to start taking away the pain points that were preventing deployment of these key technologies.

And so, given her critical role in creating this Deploy360 Programme, our team is certainly sad to see her leave this week. As Leslie wrote in her farewell blog post on the Internet Technology Matters blog, her six-and-a-half years here at the Internet Society has been a rather amazing ride with some remarkable accomplishments – and she does leave this organization in a much stronger place than when she began.

Beyond her work with our program and the Standards & Technology team and programs such as World IPv6 Launch, she’s also been a tireless and effective communicator explaining complex technologies in simpler terms and seeking to get people to understand why Internet technology matters and why they should care. Whether it has been tirelessly championing permissionless innovation, speaking about the “Internet Invariants” that make the Internet unique, outlining how current events can break the Internet, explaining the importance of open Internet standards … or any of a hundred other topics she has written about on the Internet Technology Matters (ITM) blog, on CircleID, on her own web site or in the many thousands upon thousands of email messages she has sent over the IETF and IAB mailing lists… and in all of the many presentations she has given at conferences of all types and all around the world…  through that all she has remained focused on ensuring the Internet remains open for everyone. As she says on her own site:

It’s that openness and accessibility of the Internet that we need to preserve if we want to see our brightest possible future.

Thank you, Leslie, for all you have done within the IETF, the IAB and here within the Internet Society to ensure that open character of the Internet continues.

We wish her all the best with her writing, her yarn projects and her other opportunities she wants to now pursue… and we  look forward to seeing her at IETF 90 in Toronto in July and in future events! Somehow we don’t think she’ll be too far away from continuing her passionate defense of the open Internet! :-)

P.S. Leslie, you do know we might be asking you to speak at a future ION conference, right?

TDYR #152 – The Big Downside Of Depending On Facebook For Contacting People

TDYR #152 - The Big Downside Of Depending On Facebook For Contacting People by Dan York

FIR #755 – 5/11/14 – For Immediate Release

Quick News: Marketing execs call PR an underutilized strategy, new Twitter profiles are coming, Twitter adds social recruiting, EasyJet's aviation first with drones and more; Ragan promo; News that Fits: tips for creating social media analytics reports, Dan York's Tech Report, getting hashtags right, Media Monitoring Minute from CustomScoop, listener comments, the digital cavalry is no savior for the print news business, the past week on FIR, Michael Netzley's Asia Report, Igloo promo, Vine's new website is a big deal for marketers; music from Col. Bruce Hampton and Aquarium Rescue Unit; and more.

Deploy360 at RIPE68 May 12-16 in Warsaw: IPv6, BCOP and more

RIPE 68Next week will be an extremely busy week for two of our team members at the RIPE 68 meeting happening May 12-16 in Warsaw, Poland. Both Jan Žorž and Chris Grundemann will be there and as Jan is also a member of the Program Committee he has a very active week there.

Looking at the very packed RIPE 68 Meeting Plan, the week looks like this:

Monday

First, Chris Grundemann will be speaking in the “Lightning Talks” plenary session happening sometime between 16:00-17:30 about our “Operators and the IETF” project and what we are doing to try to get more network operators involved with the IETF standards process.

Jan will be chairing one of the early plenary sessions but his main activity will be the Best Current Operational Practices (BCOP) Taskforce meeting happening Monday night.  Several aspects:

  • Jan is chairing the overall session along with Benno Overeinder
  • Jan will be speaking about the document on “IPv6 Troubleshooting for Helpdesks”, of which he is one of the editors
  • Our colleague Andrei Robachevsky will be speaking about the “Code of Conduct” initiative

Jan, as you may be aware, also heads up our effort focused on getting more BCOP documentation out there.

Tuesday

Chris will be speaking in the 11:00-12:30 plenary session on the topic of “Security in an IPv6 World: Myth & Reality” looking at IPv6 security issues.

I’ll note that later in the day (16:00-17:30) there will be a session celebrating 25 years of RIPE which will be great to see! (And congratulations are certainly due to everyone in the RIPE community on hitting that milestone!)

Wednesday

On Wednesday we don’t have any specific Deploy360-related presentations, although Jan will be presenting as an individual in a session about the address policy working group.

Thursday

For us, Thursday will be all about the IPv6 Working Group, with multiple activities:

  • Jan and Sander Steffann will be presenting about the work underway to update the RIPE-554 requirements for IPv6 in ICT equipment.
  • Jan and Benno Overeinder will be speaking again about the BCOP document for IPv6 troubleshooting for helpdesks.

You can expect to find both Jan and Chris in that session given the other very interesting presentations as well.

While there in Warsaw both Chris and Jan are very interested to talk to people about how we can help you with your deployment of IPv6, DNSSEC or the other topics we cover.  If you’d like to meet with either of them, you can find them in the sessions above – or email us at deploy360@isoc.org.

FIR Live #25 – 5/9/14 – IABC’s 2014 Fellows

Brad Whitworth, ABC, joins FIR co-host Shel Holtz for a discussion with four of the five new IABC Fellows: John Deveney, ABC, George McGrath, Mark Schumann, ABC, and Jennifer Wah, ABC. (Tamara Gillis, ABC, Ph.D was unable to participate.)

TDYR #151 – I Could Never Hit That Branch If I Tried… Yet I Do

TDYR #151 - I Could Never Hit That Branch If I Tried... Yet I Do by Dan York

TDYR #150 – For A Brief Moment, I Was Excited About Twitter Again

TDYR #150 - For A Brief Moment, I Was Excited About Twitter Again by Dan York