Chinese Root Server Shut Down After DNS Problem
itwbennett writes "After a networking error first reported on Wednesday last week caused computers in Chile and the US to come under the control of a system that censors the Internet in China, the 'root DNS server associated with the networking problems has been disconnected from the Internet,' writes Robert McMillan. The server's operator, Netnod, has 'withdrawn route announcements' made by the server, according to company CEO Kurt Lindqvist."
For a moment, it stretched around the world. Or, atleast to the Americas.
To fully implement dnssec.
If I had an Ass, I'd call it Fanny Bottom, then I could slap my Ass; Fanny Bottom, on the Arse.
It had to happen sooner or later...
So... the chinese DNS server was using BGP? Sorry, not much of a BIND geek. Is this a reference to the Anycast protocol?
boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
The artilce includes a sample of Twitter tweets, all in Chinese. Unfortunately, just entering the Twitter search URL into Google translator doesn't seem to work, as the "Realtime results for Netnod" (http://twitter.com/search?q=Netnod) are apparently served via JSON or something. Anyone got any ideas?
Nothing for 6-digit uids?
Who knows, in the few days that the Great Firewall of China crossed the Pacific, the kind of damage that could have been done, or perhaps even already been done?
This should never have been allowed to happen in the first place, and when it had, it shouldn't have been allowed to persist for a few days before being made public and taking action.
WWIII will be a cyberwar stemming from the fallout of the seemingly rising tension between China and Other web-present nations.
They got to the "Root" of the problem.
[ducks]
All of the articles I've read about this seem to confuse DNS and BGP. My guess is that the IP of one of the root dns servers was being "hijacked" by the Chinese by announcing a route to it and that route was being picked up externally so some people thinking they were using the real dns root were being diverted a chinese root server giving out different IP addresses for lookups on these domains. Does that make sense?
Check out Optus resolving for twitter and facebook as far back as March 11th
I remember reading od slashdot how problem was not in Chinese root server, but in ISP's who misconfigured...
Now I read about that root server being shut down.
Next posting will be some YRO but of course not about right of biggest Internet nation in the world to operate it's own DNS root server.
Someone, during all this mess, decided - everyone can have some rights, except China.
And slashdot is in concert with that someone.
But, it's nothing new, of course. History repeats. Amplitude varies, period is shorter.
Next week: Commizon's of the world are experiencing unexpected problems on fiber routes to China, all seventeen of them.
http://opencm3.net, http://www.nongnu.org/gm2/
for that brief period when the great FW stretched to other places, people were not able to connect to facebook and twitter, and as a result, productivity went up! /s
I blame American and Chile ISP's.
Why on earth would you query the root server on the other side of the world, especially in an ass backwards country like China when there are plenty of good servers here?
Shouldn't you query the closest available server, not the furthest?
I know we're all concerned with China's web censorship (I certainly am; I live in China).
But the ChinaDaily is reporting that the Chinese are *controlling the weather!*
http://www.chinadaily.cn/china/2010-03/28/content_9652977.htm (Sorry, I don't know how to make links in this dialog).
My Internet connection in Thailand has had hundreds of 404s for well known sites this week. Waiting a few minutes or forcing a refresh seems to work 70% of the time.
Put identity in the browser.
Can we just disconnect China? 90% of the spam, malware and port scans against systems I support all seem to originate from China. I've already blocked quite a few IP ranges, but it's just not very effective.
um.... isn't kurt lindqvist the legendary dragon slayer in tom holt's comic fantasy books??
Why is this surprising? There are more 6 digit UIDs than 5-,4-,3-,2-,and 1-digit UIDs combined.
The gap between their UIDs is the same as CmdrTaco telling user #200000 how 1337 he is. You only see a difference between the two situations because you fail at maths.
All, as this topic has drawn quite some interest I would like to reiterate some of our other public comments.At Netnod/Autonomica we are completely dedicated to serving the IANA root zone as we receive it. We do not intercept, interfere, rewrite or otherwise alter either queries, responses or the content of the zone itself. The events that occurred are still being investigated and as soon as we deemed we had collected enough data we withdraw the announcements from on of our anycast nodes that serve i.root-servers.net. I can't guarantee that me or any of our staff monitors this thread, but we do try and communicate to the community as much as we can without adding further speculations. Best regards, - kurtis - --- Kurt Erik Lindqvist, CEO kurtis@netnod.se, Direct: +46-8-562 860 11, Switch: +46-8-562 860 00 Please note our new address: Franzéngatan 5 | SE-112 51 Stockholm | Sweden