Re: Who Really Controls Internet?



In article <telecom24.328.9@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, barmar@xxxxxxxxxxxx
says:

> In article <telecom24.327.6@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Tony P.
> <kd1s@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

>> Those are just TLD name servers, nothing more. The Internet would
>> still work if those were to just disappear but it would be less useful
>> or easy to use than it is now.

>> Every server gets an IP address. That's what you really use to
>> connect. DNS is just there to translate human readable to machine
>> readable.

> What you *really* use are binary digits represented as electronic
> signal levels on various types of wires and radio transmissions, but
> we don't make users modulate those manually, either.

That's the physical level that most people consider to be Freakin'
Magic. And it isn't just modulated on wire or over the air, but via
light in fiber optic cables.

> And what about all the load balancing and fault tolerance that come
> from allowing a host name to resolve to multiple addresses and
> changing the mappings on the fly?

You could perform something similar with your hosts file. It's just
that the explosive growth of the net meant the hosts files that SRI
would transfer around got to be a bit too large.

> Names are more than just a way to make things user-friendly, they're
> an important piece of the Internet architecture. I don't think
> there's ever been a network of more than a few dozen machines that
> didn't depend on a naming scheme to enhance the capabilities.

> Consider this: how useful would the phone be if you could only call
> people whose phone numbers you already knew, i.e. there were no phone
> books or directory assistance?

Right now there isn't anyone I know whose phone number is in a phone
book. Between cell and VoIP it's damned near impossible to do a lookup
these days unless the end user is smart enough to list their selves on
a lookup site.

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: hosts problem
    ... > servers having both internet/intranet IP. ... > for the mail servers in the hosts file, ... > picking the internet IP and not the internal IP. ... your ISP's DNS servers on the DNS server itself. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.general)
  • Re: hosts problem
    ... The problem was Windows was not able to read the hosts file, ... >> servers works and the IP picked up is that of internal lan. ... >> picking the internet IP and not the internal IP. ... > your ISP's DNS servers on the DNS server itself. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.general)
  • RE: IIS6 Security and other web servers
    ... IIS6 Security and other web servers ... I know of no Windows architecture that is exposed directly to ... I know of a number of LAMP-type servers that are ... exposed directly to the Internet with no intervening layers. ...
    (Security-Basics)
  • Re: Restrict Dynamic Updates
    ... exposed to the Internet is an inherently bad idea, but am in a position where ... my thought was to leave the clients pointing to the BIND/DNS ... servers to resolve all non-AD queries and redirect them to the AD/DNS servers ... internal DNS server host external public data. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.dns)
  • Re: Windows client - internet connection sharing
    ... or USB port on your FreeBSD box. ... This enables you to set up a 'DMZ' network, ... instance have several servers visible on the Internet. ...
    (freebsd-questions)