A root-server at the Internet’s core lost touch with its peers. We still don’t know why. - eviltoast
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    6 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    This server, maintained by Internet carrier Cogent Communications, is one of the 13 root servers that provision the Internet’s root zone, which sits at the top of the hierarchical distributed database known as the domain name system, or DNS.

    When someone enters wikipedia.org in their browser, the servers handling the request first must translate the human-friendly domain name into an IP address.

    Each root sever is, in fact, a cluster of servers that are also geographically dispersed, providing even more redundancy.

    If keys aren’t identical across all 13 root servers, there’s an increased risk of attacks such as DNS cache poisoning.

    For reasons that remain unclear outside of Cogent—which declined to comment for this post—all 12 instances of the c-root it’s responsible for maintaining suddenly stopped updating on Saturday.

    Stéphane Bortzmeyer, a French engineer who was among the first to flag the problem in a Tuesday post, noted then that the c-root was three days behind the rest of the root servers.


    The original article contains 498 words, the summary contains 162 words. Saved 67%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!