Merit Network
Can't find what you're looking for? Search the Mail Archives.
  About Merit   Services   Network   Resources & Support   Network Research   News   Events   Home

Discussion Communities: Merit Network Email List Archives

North American Network Operators Group

Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical

Re: DNS cache poisoning attacks -- are they real?

  • From: Suresh Ramasubramanian
  • Date: Sun Mar 27 06:30:54 2005
  • Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=beta; d=gmail.com; h=received:message-id:date:from:reply-to:to:subject:cc:in-reply-to:mime-version:content-type:content-transfer-encoding:references; b=rdaZO/U1TYLfh4cfHcbg6Y6EaqA2qN7hta/5hoWyJ1ueIMI7wildPv/Sbny3q2Hj1BoBAlqpn3pCagq59F6bAB13/xk8OcOES5mGG0yUA6Z7hWn1UjVt5pPMxLfuyzcr/exzQstse4gu2ALjz5iOoiCWxNdX8/bdcWQXz2RmonE=

On Sat, 26 Mar 2005 17:52:56 -0500 (EST), Sean Donelan <sean@donelan.com> wrote:
> 
> On the other hand, there are a lot of reasons why a DNS operator may
> return different answers to their own users of their resolvers.  Reverse
> proxy caching is very common. Just about all WiFi folks use cripple
> DNS as part of their log on. Or my favorite, quarantining infected
> computers to get the attention of their owners.
> 

I hate that cripple dns stuff - they seem to add transparent proxying
of dns requests to it as well, sometimes.

I've seen cases where my laptop's local resolver (dnscache) suddenly
starts returning weird values like 1.1.1.1, 120.120.120.120 etc for
*.one-of-my-domains.com for some reason.

Thank $DEITY for large ISPs running open resolvers on fat pipes ..
those do come in quite handy in a resolv.conf sometimes, when I run
into this sort of behavior.

--srs




Discussion Communities


About Merit | Services | Network | Resources & Support | Network Research
News | Events | Contact | Site Map | Merit Network Home


Merit Network, Inc.