Hola a todos!
Supongo que ya muchos saben que en noviembre tendremos un ICANN aqui cerca, en Buenos Aires.
Esta abierto (extendido hasta el 20) el llamado para presentaciones en el workshop de DNSSEC.
s2
~Carlos
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: [dns-operations] Call for Participation -- ICANN DNSSEC Workshop 20 November 2013 Date: Fri, 23 Aug 2013 09:22:58 -0700 From: Julie Hedlund julie.hedlund@icann.org To: dns-operations@lists.dns-oarc.net dns-operations@mail.dns-oarc.net
Call for Participation -- ICANN DNSSEC Workshop 20 November 2013
The DNSSEC Deployment Initiative and the Internet Society Deploy360 Programme, in cooperation with the ICANN Security and Stability Advisory Committee (SSAC), is planning a DNSSEC Workshop at the ICANN meeting in Buenos Aires, Argentina on 20 November 2013. The DNSSEC Workshop has been a part of ICANN meetings for several years and has provided a forum for both experienced and new people to meet, present and discuss current and future DNSSEC deployments. For reference, the most recent session was held at the ICANN meeting in Durban, South Africa on 17 July 2013. The presentations and transcripts are available at: http://durban47.icann.org/node/39749.
We are seeking presentations on the following topics:
For this panel we are seeking participation from those who have been involved in DNSSEC deployment in Latin America, but also from those who have not deployed DNSSEC but who have a keen interest in the challenges and benefits of deployment. In particular, we will consider the following questions: What can DNSSEC do for you? What doesn't it do? What are the internal tradeoffs to implement DNSSEC or not?
Now that DNSSEC has become an operational norm for many registries, registrars, and ISPs, what have we learned about how we manage DNSSEC? What's best practice around key rollovers? How often do you review your disaster recovery procedures? Is there operational familiarity within your customer support teams? What operational statistics have we gathered about DNSSEC? Are there experiences being documented in the form of best practices, or something similar, for transfer of signed zones?
DNSSEC has always been seen as a huge benefit to organizations looking to protect their identity and security on the Web. Large enterprises are an obvious target for DNS hackers and DNSSEC provides an ideal solution to this challenge. This session aims to look at the benefits and challenges of deploying DNSSEC for major enterprises. Topics for discussion:
And how do they do so?
they foresee raising awareness of DNSSEC with their customers?
What have we learned from some of the operational outages that we have seen over the past 18 months? Are there lessons that we can pass on to those just about to implement DNSSEC? How do you manage dissemination of information about the outage? What have you learned about communications planning? Do you have a route to ISPs and registrars? How do you liaise with your CERT community?
For this topic we are seeking input on issues relating to root key rollover. In particular, we are seeking comments from vendors, ISPs, and the community that will be affected by distribution of new root keys.
The DNS-based Authentication of Named Entitites (DANE) protocol is an exciting development where DNSSEC can be used to provide a strong additional trust layer for traditional SSL/TLS certificates. There is strong interest for DANE usage within web transactions as well as for securing email and Voice-over-IP (VoIP). We are seeking presentations on topics such as:
industries?
secure Internet?
For DNSSEC to reach massive deployment levels it is clear that a higher level of automation is required than is currently available. Topics for which we would like to see presentations include:
key management?
are the best opportunities for automation?
The 2013 Registrar Accreditation Agreement (RAA) for Registrars and Resellers requires the support of DNSSEC beginning on January 1, 2014. We are seeking presentations discussing:
registrars meet those requirements?
DNSSEC support?
resellers and ultimately customers?
We are particularly interested in hearing from registrars who have signed the 2013 RAA and have either already implemented DNSSEC support or have a plan for doing so.
One specific area that has been identified as needing focus is the communication between registrars and DNS hosting operators, specifically when these functions are provided by different entities. Right now the communication, such as the transfer of a DS record, occurs primarily by way of the domain name holder copying and pasting information from one web interface to another. How can this be automated? We would welcome presentations by either registrars or DNS hosting operators who have implemented APIs for the communication of DNSSEC information - or from people with ideas around how such APIs could be constructed.
In addition, we welcome suggestions for additional topics.
If you are interested in participating, please send a brief (1-2 sentence) description of your proposed presentation to dnssec-buenosaires@shinkuro.com mailto:dnssec-buenosaires@shinkuro.com by **Friday, 06 September 2013**
We hope that you can join us.
Thank you,
Julie Hedlund
On behalf of the DNSSEC Workshop Program Committee: Steve Crocker, Shinkuro Mark Elkins, DNS/ZACR Cath Goulding, Nominet UK Jean Robert Hountomey, AfricaCERT Jacques Latour, .CA Xiaodong Lee, CNNIC Russ Mundy, Sparta/Parsons Ondøej Surý, CZ.NIC Lance Wolak, .ORG, The Public Interest Registry Yoshiro Yoneya, JPRS Dan York, Internet Society