nanog mailing list archives

Re: Fwd: Re: [NIC-990226.52da] Suggestion: Add contact entry to whois


From: owen () dixon DeLong SJ CA US (Owen DeLong)
Date: Mon, 15 Mar 1999 09:08:46 -0800


If RWHOIS were the universal mechanism for maintaining domain information,
that would be true.  Here's my line of thinking:

Problem:
        People constantly look up SPAM sources in whois, send mail to the
        Tech. contact.  Often, the Tech. contact is not the security or
        abuse contact.  This creates workload for the tech contact and
        delays in getting security and abuse information to the right
        destination.

Solution:
        Add two contact fields to the WHOIS/RWHOIS/SWIP databases of the
        world providing for a security and an abuse contact.  Sites that
        don't have seperate contacts would simply repeat the information,
        much like the existing Admin/Tech/Zone tends to often be the same
        contact.  It seems to me that this is minimal additional effort
        to obtain much better scalability and usefullness of the information
        presented.

It does not try to solve other problems.  It doesn't try to solve the problem
of out-of-date contact information, lame delegations, clubies, etc.  There
are other ways to solve those problems.  However, this effort is focused
strictly on the problem above.

Owen

Owen,

  If you do go via the RFC process, might I offer a suggestion.  RWHOIS
  would seem to be the natural mechanism for obtaining this information.
  Just like DNS database management is in the hands of the domain holder,
  abuse contact information could also be.  Sites that object on principle
  to having the contact information available, wouldn't have to publish
  a contact or they could publish a generic contact.

  Relying upon RWHOIS might also force greater acceptance of RWHOIS and
  better client software could become available, as well as implementation
  of the optional referral feature.

  RWHOIS would also remove the single point of failure that currently
  exists in the form of the InterNIC.  This might also make bulk 
  trolling of information from the whois database harder once the
  data is distributed across all the domain holders.

Dan

--
Dan Watts
Vitts Networks
dwatts () vitts com




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