
May 25 2010 by

Cricket Liu (Infoblox)
I spent Tuesday of last week in Manchester, New Hampshire, at a DNS confab hosted by Dyn Inc. This was different from most DNS get-togethers I've attended: Most DNS meetings are fairly academic, and focus on discussions of relatively arcane aspects of DNS technology. This one centered on the business of DNS, and was attended by representatives from a number of up-and-coming companies in the DNS space, including quite a few DNS hosting companies.
The high point of the meeting, for me, was taping the latest episode of The Ask Mr. DNS Podcast, my friend Matt and my irregular podcast on all things DNS (and many things not DNS). Dyn graciously provided studio-quality equipment to record a roomful of participants, and most of the attendees joined the taping session.
The most surprising part of taping the episode - besides the fact that it worked as well as it did! - was learning that China blocks access to the name servers of every DNS hosting provider attending. That's astounding.
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Posted in Internationalized Domain Names |
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May 07 2010 by

Cricket Liu (Infoblox)
With DNSSEC's Red Letter Day, July 1, approaching, it'd be easy to neglect another DNS milestone, passed on May 5. For the first time, the root zone contains delegation to non-ASCII domain names. Gone are the days of just A to Z and 0 to 9, with dash added for spice. Today, if you look closely at a copy of the root zone, you'll find delegation to XN--WGBH1C, XN--MGBERP4A5D4AR and XN--MGBAAM7A8H.
Wait a minute--those are ASCII domain names, too - albeit cryptic ones, aren't they?
Yes, but they're specially encoded domain names. Using a technique called IDNA, for Internationalized Domain Names in Applications, software can nowencode characters from the whole world's scripts into ASCII. The characters are taken from Unicode, a standard that encodes characters from 90 of the world's scripts, totaling more than 107,000 characters, from Arabic to Yi. (Yi? Yeah, I'd never heard of it either.) The resulting domain names look weird (for example, they all start with "XN--," as you can see above), but IDN software has no trouble decoding them into appropriate-looking characters
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Posted in Internationalized Domain Names |
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