GLOBAL INTERNET SHUTDOWN NEWS
Why you need not panic about global internet shutdown?
Global Internet body ICANN said on Friday
that it has noted only a handful cases where Net services might have affected
adversely due to the upgradation of 'keys' at vital web servers that took place
on October 11.
"It is now about 20 hours since the
rollover and based on all information we have, everything is going smoothly.
There have been only a small handful of reports of issues suspected to be
caused by the rollover. In all cases it appears the impact was minor and the
issues were quickly resolved," an ICANN spokesperson told PTI.
ICANN has announced in
July 2016 to upgrade cryptographic keys that are required to access security
system of website names, called Domain Name System Security Extensions
(DNSSEC).
When an internet user types a website on his browser, the broadband or Internet
modem transmits that name to a system called resolver-- which converts the
website name in to numeric form containing code and server address of the
website.
ICANN has asked all internet service providers to upgrade their software that
resolves the website name in to digital code and directs the traffic to right
server.
DNSSEC is an additional layer which validates the website name has been
converted correctly.
The keys required to accesses the DNSSEC central server system called root zone
were implemented in 2010 and hence were required to be upgraded for protection.
The transition was planned for October 11 , 2017 but was deferred by a year due
to unclear data received just before the rollover.
Before running the system upgrade, ICANN had estimated that more than 99 per
cent of users whose system are validating DNSSSEC will be unaffected by the
rollover while the body that handles website name allocation in Asia, Regional
Internet Registry for the Asia Pacific region (APNIC) had estimated that only
0.05 per cent of Internet users would be negatively affected by the transition.
The ICANN spokesperson said no one can know definitively which operators have
enabled DNSSEC validation on their resolvers, and because no one but the
operator can tell if a resolver with DNSSEC validation enabled was ready for
the rollover.
"...no one could know exactly which users might be affected by the KSK
rollover and where they would be," the spokesperson said.
However, Internet service providers whose system did not perform DNSSEC
validation function will not be impacted by the transition at all.
According to ICANN estimates are that about two thirds of users are behind
resolvers that do not yet perform DNSSEC validation
WHAT IS A DNS?
The DNS addresses can be considered as address book for the internet. The way it works is that it understands the web addresses we punch into the web browsers in our PCs and phones, for example, and then matches them in the database with the correct domains and internet protocol (IP) addresses—so that you are directed to the page you actually need to go. Every web domain is listed in this directory. And this is how all the web traffic is managed and directed correctly.
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