On the website, if you dig deep enough, they have a link to a document that defines what they mean by abuse. http://dnsabuseframework.org/media/files/2020-05-29_DNSAbuseFramework.pdf It is essentially a list of ill thing like spam, malware, botnets, and phishing and the like. In other words the "abuse" is not directly an aspect of DNS but rather of something that uses DNS, among other technologies. That same logic could also be used to tie the enumerated ills to "abuse of electricity" or "abuse of computers" or "abuse of IPv6". In their list of "DNS abuses" it is Pharming that is perhaps the closest to DNS itself. There is no doubt that the things are bad and deserve to be slowed, blocked, denied, and otherwise prevented. And if that prevention may involve some changes to the way we administer DNS or operate it, or even how it is defined in the RFCs. But to call these bad things "DNS Abuse" is, to my mind, rather a stretch. And if we are to talk about these things we should very clearly understand whether we are talking about the name registration machinery via registrars and registries and provisioning protocols and whois, versus the actual machinery of resolving DNS names via name servers. I would add, however, that some of this is of our own making - my favorite being the five minute update period between someone changing record at a registrar and that change appearing out there on the net. Much as that five minute period is really nice when I am making changes I am of the opinion that convenience to those of us who make updates should be outweighed by the public interest in avoiding threats that are facilitated by fast (five minute) updates to the mappings of 2nd tier names (e.g. names directly under the TLDs - there's not much we can do about rapid updates deeper in the hierarchy.) --karl-- On 2/18/21 1:02 PM, Matthias M. Hudobnik wrote:
Dear all,
What do you guys think about this initiative: https://dnsabuseinstitute.org/ :-)? Have a nice evening!
Kindest regards, Matthias
__________________________ Ing. Mag. Matthias M. Hudobnik, CIPP/E matthias@hudobnik.at http://www.hudobnik.at @mhudobnik
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