Isn't he in jail now or very shortly? The bloke behind Pirate Bay wants to set up an alternative to the domain name outfit ICANN. Peter Sunde says that he has been suspicious of ICANN for a long time. ICANN is the non-profit corporation is tasked with managing both the IPv4 and IPv6 Internet Protocol address spaces as well as handling the management of top-level domain name space including the operation of root nameservers. . However Sunde said that he has lost a domain in the past and it was taken without any consultation. Instead the organisation relied on information from recording industry group IFPI to change the domain ownership. He has put out a Tweet to create a competing root server - The link for this article located at fudzilla is no longer available. . Sara's initiative to develop a rival web hosting solution arises from prior experiences of service interruption with major providers.. Domain Management, ICANN Alternative, DNS Alternatives, Internet Governance. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A year after surviving a massive distributed denial-of-service attack, the Internet's root servers are better fortified against hacker activity, thanks to behind-the-scenes deployment of a routing technique known as Anycast, experts say.. . .. A year after surviving a massive distributed denial-of-service attack, the Internet's root servers are better fortified against hacker activity, thanks to behind-the-scenes deployment of a routing technique known as Anycast, experts say. With Anycast, the root server operators have more than doubled the number of server farms available to handle the highest-level DNS queries. This routing technique heightens root server resilience by multiplying the number of servers with the same IP address and balancing the load across an army of geographically dispersed servers. A handful of the 13 root server operators have begun deploying Anycast since last year's attack, which didn't succeed in crashing DNS but rendered several root servers unavailable for legitimate queries. Experts say the deployment of Anycast is making the entire root-server system more resistant to outage. The link for this article located at NW Fusion is no longer available. . A year after surviving a massive distributed denial-of-service attack, the Internet's root servers a. surviving, massive, distributed, denial-of-service, attack, internet's, servers. . Anthony Pell
Last week's attacks on the Internet's backbone likely emanated from computers in the United States and South Korea, FBI Director Robert Mueller today said. "The investigation is ongoing," Mueller said at an Internet security conference in Falls Church, Va. He . . . . Last week's attacks on the Internet's backbone likely emanated from computers in the United States and South Korea, FBI Director Robert Mueller today said. "The investigation is ongoing," Mueller said at an Internet security conference in Falls Church, Va. He did not offer more details on the investigation, nor did he outline the evidence investigators have gathered so far. Last Monday, a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack struck the 13 "root" servers that provide the primary road map for the Internet. A subsequent and possibly related attack targeted the "name" servers that house Internet domains like dot-com and dot-info. East Asia is a major source of cyber crime and computer attacks, in part because of the relatively high number of broadband users in the region's countries. High-speed Internet service is essential to DDOS attacks, in which hackers use dozens -- and often hundreds -- of commandeered computers to overwhelm targeted networks with a flood of Internet traffic. South Korea boasts nearly as many broadband users (8 million) as the U.S. and has more broadband connections per capita than any other country. The link for this article located at WashingtonPost is no longer available. . Last week's attacks on the Internet's backbone likely emanated from computers in the United States a. week's, attacks, internet's, backbone, likely, emanated, computers, united, states. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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