On 11/22/2011 07:38 AM, Evan Leibovitch wrote:
Internet domains are, by their nature, public instruments to be used to help people find Internet content.
I strongly disagree. A domain name is a sequence of keys into a distributed database of records or several types ranging from text to addresses to crypto keys to lat/long coordinates. For instance I have the text of the Magna Carta stored in DNS records. Those records may be, and often are, opaque and meaningful only to a few people, for example address records that contain addresses in private IP address spaces. And by using the phrase "find internet content" you are conflating the internet, to which the DNS pertains, with the much smaller thing called the World Wide Web. The real technical problem is that on the internet there is not a uniform scheme of identification and authentication of identity. Thus on the world wide web (and on the net in general) connections are made on the presumption that a domain name mapping is somehow more than a hint. What people are doing on the net today is as if they grabbed a telephone book, looked up a physician, dialed the number, and then without any validation that they are actually talking to the physician they blurt out their deep secrets. In real life real people have long since learned that when a telephone call is made that one of the first steps performed is a degree of validation that the other party is who he/she is believed to be. We don't do that on the internet - it is a flaw in the architecture of the net. We do have IPsec, but we don't use it. And TLS is often one way or not validated back to a trusted certificate authority. Instead the burden has been lain onto the domain name system; and it is a job that the DNS was never intended to perform and which it does poorly. This is one area in which privacy, by
and large is the realm of people hiding from (what I believe to be) legitimate investigation. I do not believe that, in this case, the public should be denied information available to law enforcement.
That would be a terrible idea. Law enforcement people are bound, or at least in theory are bound by rules, laws, constitutional limitations that do no apply to private individuals.
I would remind that At-Large is charged with protecting the interests of Internet end users, not registrants. Registrants have an interest in being able to hide. End users have an interest in domain owner accountability and transparency.
Registrants are end-users too. I suspect that most domain name registrants don't appreciate condemnation without a trial adducing specific facts and acts that prove that they are guilty of specific unlawful acts. So I do not accept the notion that because name registrants are, in your opinion, possibly able to commit ill acts that they should lose rights accorded to others. --karl--