News of ISC Developing BIND Patch
bdragon at gweep.net
bdragon at gweep.net
Wed Sep 17 22:39:27 UTC 2003
> On Wed, 17 Sep 2003, [ISO-8859-1] Mathias Körber 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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