ICANN: To Serve and Protect

Published: 14 November 2001 y., Wednesday
They also prompted the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to toss out its customary agenda and replace it with a three-day special meeting, which begins Tuesday, on how to guard the Net's most vulnerable portions from terrorist attacks. In the words of an ICANN announcement from September, the "overriding imperative" is to figure out how to thwart al-Qaida or its domestic relations from wreaking electronic havoc on the Internet's domain name system, which translates names like wired.com to the numeric address 209.202.221.20. Much of the Internet's infrastructure -- such as e-mail servers and websites -- is decentralized and not easily targeted by malcontents. But since the domain-name system intentionally was designed with one master database for efficiency's sake, it also represents a centralized point of failure. Currently there are 13 computers, called root servers, that manage global Internet traffic. Some can be found in high-security buildings such as Verisign's Herndon, Virginia, offices -- home to the master "A" root server. Others are run by volunteers at universities and corporations in Tokyo, Stockholm and London. Concern over root-server security led to an Internet Engineering Task Force best-practices memo last year, which stressed that physical and electronic security must be paramount. A malcontent who breached a root server could spoof domain names, forge websites and disrupt the Internet for millions of people.
Šaltinis: wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Estonian eDemocracy

Estonian officials announced plans last week to move the nation to electronic voting in time for the country's 2003 general election. more »

The controversial contract

ICANN Board Member Blasts VeriSign Decision more »

Vierika virus worse than Kournikova

Similar to Kournikova virus, Vierika is both a nice russian girl and a new dangerous virus. more »

Internet World Israel Expecting Big Crowd Despite Economic Slump

Organizers and exhibitors of Internet World Israel 2001 were busy with last minute preparations at the Tel Aviv Fairgrounds on Sunday. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Unhappy creator

Hacker Pulls Worm Kit From Site more »

French to Debate E-Voting Plans

Proposals for a bill that would legalize cyber-elections are likely to face widespread resistance. more »

Asian-Language Web Dispute Settled

In the first dispute over Internet domain names in an Asian alphabet, a United Nations panel has ruled in favor of Japanese pharmaceutical company Sankyo. more »

A key foundation

EC's Liikanen Talks About Content In The E-World more »

Microsoft Wants to Conquer E-Government

The software company helped the U.K. build its portal. more »