RE: [DNS] Marketing 101

RE: [DNS] Marketing 101

From: Discount Domain Name Services <rod§ddns.com.au>
Date: Wed, 24 Nov 2004 10:39:46 +1100
I agree Marty. Auda should have had a press release out in the marketplace
Dare I say "education"

-----Original Message-----
From: Marty Drill - Domain Candy [mailto:marty&#167;domaincandy.com.au] 
Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 2004 9:16 PM
To: dns&#167;dotau.org
Subject: RE: [DNS] Marketing 101

Interestingly the home page of the .com site is different today to
yesterday. An entry page has appeared, which for unsuspecting kids (and
their parents), is a good thing.

I suggest there were some Telstra execs making some pleading phone calls
with bags of cash in the waiting, to get it to happen.

I think it is good for the Australian industry, as it highlights the need
for the .com.au.

I would have liked auDA to seize upon the opportunity to again highlight in
the press the importance of .au. This may have happened and I may have not
seen it. Regardless, a good lesson learned.

Cheers

Marty

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Jonathan Ah Kit [mailto:ahkitj&#167;jnawk.net.nz] 
Sent: Tuesday, 23 November 2004 8:44 PM
To: dns&#167;dotau.org
Subject: Re: [DNS] Marketing 101

Kim Davies wrote:

>Quoting Malcolm Miles on Tuesday November 23, 2004:
>| On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 23:42:46 +0800, you wrote:
>| 
>| >http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,114700
>| >70%255E2702,00.html
>| 
>| "Efforts by Telstra BigPond technicians to block access to the porn 
>| site failed."
>| 
>| How did they think they were going to do that? Perhaps they could 
>| filter it from BigPond users but not everybody is a BigPond user.
>Well, they are publishing fake records for the gay porn site to their 
>customers, thusly:
>
>This of couse raises interesting ethical questions about an ISPs right 
>to peform man-in-the-middle spoofing on your Internet traffic.
>
>Roll on DNSSEC I say, and this will be a thing of the past.
>
Kia ora Kim,

Surely there are easier ways of doing this filtering instead of spoofing the
DNS, such as (are they common in .au? I can't recall offhand) transparent
proxying. It'd filter it out less users, surely, but doesn't involve
spoofing DNS.

Though does raise, of course ethical issues too. Though I can't imagine too
many users wanting at the moment to visit a pr0n star's site over an Idol
winner. Dunno.

Ka kite,
Jonathan Ah Kit.

--
Jonathan Ah Kit - Lower Hutt - New Zealand jonathan&#167;ah-kit.dropbear.id.au -
http://www.ah-kit.dropbear.id.au/ ahkitj&#167;paradise.net.nz - ICQ#9747234 -
http://www.electric.gen.nz/ Away message: Looking for adhesive tape, not
Alibrandi.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------
List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://dotau.org/
Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the 
author, further information at the above URL.


---------------------------------------------------------------------------
List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://dotau.org/
Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the 
author, further information at the above URL.
Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Sat Sep 09 2017 - 22:00:08 UTC