main

ISC to issue patch for Bind to block Verisign's site finder

MaceX   on 20 September 2003 - 02:48 · 7 comments & 1688 views

Advertisement (Why?)
The Internet Software Consortium, a nonprofit that publishes BIND, the software that runs many of the Net's domain name servers, is about to release an emergency patch to block VeriSign's new Site Finder service.

"The phone has been ringing off the hook with deeply unhappy customers," he said. "We don't have a political ax to grind. Whether VeriSign should or should not have done this is not for us to decide. But we have to respond to our customers who are demanding it."

Vixie said that ISC's customers -- typically ISPs and large enterprises -- needed a fix because VeriSign's Site Finder broke their spam filters.

News source: Wired - ISC to Cut Off Site Finder


VeriSign's Site Finder, launched on Monday, has drawn heated criticism for hijacking mistyped Web addresses. Instead of getting an error message, Web surfers who mistype ".com" and ".net" Web addresses are redirected to the Site Finder service, which then offers a list of likely alternatives, some of which are paid-placement links. Critics complain the new service gives VeriSign too much control over online traffic and allows it to profit from an essential monopoly over ".com" and ".net" names. VeriSign is charged by the U.S. government with running the ".com" and ".net" domains, and directs much of the traffic on the Internet.

However, the ISC is about to undercut the Site Finder service with a patch to its BIND software.

BIND runs on about 80 percent of the Internet's domain name servers -- the machines that translate human-readable Web addresses like www.wired.com into machine-readable Internet addresses used by the Internet's vast network of computers."

The patch will be released by the end of Tuesday, said Paul Vixie, ISC's president.

"The phone has been ringing off the hook with deeply unhappy customers," he said. "We don't have a political ax to grind. Whether VeriSign should or should not have done this is not for us to decide. But we have to respond to our customers who are demanding it."

Vixie said that ISC's customers -- typically ISPs and large enterprises -- needed a fix because VeriSign's Site Finder broke their spam filters.

Vixie said a lot of spam spoofs the "from" domain, and that many ISP-level spam filters check whether incoming e-mail is from a valid domain or not. Instead of generating errors, the spam filter checks are instead being rerouted to the Site Finder service, and therefore appear to originate from a legitimate domain.

Vixie said the ISC's customers aren't too concerned with advertising. "They don't want to help spammers. It's the lack of a viable spam-detection mechanism they're worried about. They are concerned about spam, not advertising," Vixie said.

VeriSign did not respond requests for comment.

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 7 additional comments
#1 DsnBehind on 20 Sep 2003 - 04:08
Damn VeriSign. They join Wal-Mart and Comcast on my hate list!
#2 YaddaMe on 20 Sep 2003 - 04:18
"VeriSign did not respond requests for comment."

I think they can be found hiding in Mexico.... with everyone they've screwed with SiteFinder's launch, it's probably in ther best interest... hehehe
#3 Intelligen on 20 Sep 2003 - 08:48
actually we have a veriSign here in South Dakota, Watertown SD that is
#4 SimplyPotatoes on 20 Sep 2003 - 12:23
vergisn are nazi's
#5 Avenger on 20 Sep 2003 - 19:52
Screw Verisign.
#6 Jeffrey on 20 Sep 2003 - 21:01
QUOTE
03:41 PM Sep. 16, 2003 PT


That's the 6th or so old news we have at Neowin in a few days.
#7 morphen on 22 Sep 2003 - 13:01
jeffrey; who cares? only YOU!
news are news,for some (who spend all day and all night reading news all over the web),it's old...but for those who are true neowinians,only read our news here so that we know thats it news,and not spam

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)