From: Steve Schear <azur@netcom.com>
To: cypherpunks@cyberpass.net
Message Hash: d5f074e9fd380e58f42fe1244399ec7bcf1f53141dc650fe2cf5afdb3b515259
Message ID: <v03102802aff42e90e6e0@[10.0.2.15]>
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UTC Datetime: 1997-07-17 20:36:09 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 18 Jul 1997 04:36:09 +0800
From: Steve Schear <azur@netcom.com>
Date: Fri, 18 Jul 1997 04:36:09 +0800
To: cypherpunks@cyberpass.net
Subject: AlterNIC takes over InterNIC traffic
Message-ID: <v03102802aff42e90e6e0@[10.0.2.15]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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http://www.news.com/News/Item/0%2C4%2C12382%2C00.html?nd
AlterNIC takes over InterNIC traffic
By Courtney Macavinta
July 14, 1997, 12:15 p.m. PT
A rival domain name registry to the official Internet registrar,
InterNIC, redirected users from "www.internic.net" to its own site last
weekend in what is being called a "protest."
Netizens told CNET's NEWS.COM that they ended up at AlterNIC, or
"www.alternic.net," after typing in InterNIC's URL. AlterNIC was set up by
the enhanced Domain Name Services to offer alternate top-level domains,
such as ".ltd," ".sex," and ".med."
"By redirecting the domain name 'www.internic.net,' we are protesting the
recent InterNIC claim to ownership of '.com,' '.org,' and '.net,' which
they were supposed to be running in the public trust," AlterNIC CFO Eugene
Kashpureff stated on his site.
"Our apologies for any trouble this DNS [domain name system] protest has
caused you...We think we exercised restraint in the use of our latest DNS
technology for this protest," the letter states. "We terminated the
protest configuration at 8 a.m. Monday, July 14."
The AlterNIC site also contained a link that allowed visitors to access
the actual InterNIC in the protest message.
InterNIC is the registrar of the most valuable domain names, such as
".com." It is administered in part by Network Solutions under agreement
with the National Science Foundation, which ends in March of next year.
During its tenure, Network Solutions has collected approximately $78
million in registration fees.
The protest is the latest move in the heated debate over who will control
the Internet naming system, which has turned into a lucrative business as
commercial entities fight to establish brand awareness by using the most
coveted names. For example, the name "business.com" was bought recently
from its registered owner for $150,000.
Last month, the Commerce Department asked for public comment on the
future of the domain name system. An ad hoc committee formed in part by
the Internet Society also proposed a plan last year for replacing Network
Solutions and reconfiguring how the names are handed out. Kashpureff said
he is protesting Network Solutions' claim in its recent Securities and
Exchange filing that it owned the property rights to ".com" and the other
popular domains.
"If they think they own the entire domain name space, I've got news for
them. Over the weekend, I possessed their name," he told CNET's NEWS.COM.
No one at Network Solutions could be immediately reached to comment on
whether the company will look into legal ramifications for the rerouting
of its traffic by AlterNIC.
Kashpureff wouldn't say how he managed to abduct InterNIC's domain name
but did say he did it to demonstrate the system's vulnerability. "I'm not
releasing how I did it because it would take out the name service on the
Net. The hack was a result of a years' worth of work under a project
called 'DNS Storm.'"
Moreover, there is no telling how many registrations InterNIC could have
lost due to the antic. But some Netizens who were involuntarily
transported to the alternate site didn't seem to mind.
"They do have a good point in the fact that those domain names are
supposed to be in the public trust. I don't agree with the InterNIC
monopoly either," said Jason Brunette, a Webmaster for TCB Internet in
Wisconsin, who was rerouted to AlterNIC this weekend when he tried to
register a domain.
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