nanog mailing list archives

Re: News of ISC Developing BIND Patch


From: bdragon () gweep net
Date: Wed, 17 Sep 2003 18:39:27 -0400 (EDT)


On Wed, 17 Sep 2003, [ISO-8859-1] Mathias K?rber wrote:

If we take a step back, we could say that the whole Verisign incident
demonstrated pretty clearly that the fundamental DNS premise of having no
more than one root in the namespace is seriously wrong.  This is the
fallacy of "universal classification" so convincingly trashed by
J.L.Borges in "The Analytical Language of John Wilkins".  Sigle-root
classifications simply do not work in real-world contexts.

... for objects which are created outside said classification and need
to/ want to/should be classified in it. However, the DNS does not
pretend to classify anything existing outside it in the real-world but
implements a namespace with the stated goal of providing unique
identification (which still requires a single-root)

Technically, DNS encodes the authority delegation, _and_ tries to attach
human-readable labels to every entity accessible by the Internet.

If the goal were unique identification, MAC addresses would do just fine.
No need for DNS.

MAC addresses are not without authority delegation. The IEEE is the ultimate
authority in said case.

Any solution which requires uniqueness also requires a singular ultimate
authority.


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