[AfrICANN-discuss] Google lance son propre service DNS

LO MAMADOU alfamamadou at hotmail.com
Fri Dec 4 14:44:25 SAST 2009


 

Google lance son propre service DNS

 

 

Affirmant œuvrer pour un Internet plus rapide et plus sûr, Google a lancé hier Google Public DNS, son propre service de résolution des noms de domaine. Le système est encore en phase expérimentale mais ouvert au public.



Engagé dans sa stratégie pour « rendre le web plus rapide », Google joint le geste à la parole en mettant en place un service de gestion des requêtes DNS (Domain Name, System) baptisé Google Public DNS. Le DNS est une sorte d'interface qui se charge de convertir les URL en adresses IP.
En général, ce système est géré par les fournisseurs d'accès Internet et certaines compagnies spécialisées. Partant du constat qu'il s'agit de l'un des rouages essentiels de la Toile, Google a voulu créer un DNS « plus rapide, plus sûr et plus fiable ». Google Public DNS est encore au stade expérimental mais ouvert au grand public. Il faut pour cela modifier les paramètres réseau en suivant les instructions fournies sur cette page.

« Dès que les gens commenceront à utiliser Google Public DNS, nous partageront les informations avec la communauté Internet et les fournisseurs de DNS afin d'améliorer la navigation Internet pour le plus grand nombre » conclut Google.
 
 
Source : www.itmag.sn
 


 
> Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 21:46:06 +0200
> From: africann-request at afrinic.net
> Subject: AfrICANN Digest, Vol 34, Issue 8
> To: africann at afrinic.net
> 
> Send AfrICANN mailing list submissions to
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> Today's Topics:
> 
> 1. Cameroon's .cm the Most Dangerous domain (Douglas Onyango)
> 2. Re: Cameroon's .cm the Most Dangerous domain (Anne-Rachel Inn?)
> 3. Call for local hosts for 2010 IPv6 Training (Anne-Rachel Inn?)
> 4. .AT un nouveau cap vient d'etre franchi! (Anne-Rachel Inn?)
> 5. DNS Explianed - video by CENTR (Anne-Rachel Inn?)
> 6. Thought leaders for the Internet era. (Anne-Rachel Inn?)
> 
> 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 00:52:40 -0800 (PST)
> From: Douglas Onyango <ondouglas at yahoo.com>
> Subject: [AfrICANN-discuss] Cameroon's .cm the Most Dangerous domain
> To: africann at afrinic.net
> Message-ID: <973555.96473.qm at web52107.mail.re2.yahoo.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> 
> Not so long a go google Cameroon's ranking hit unprecedented levels, this was a good thing, but is now being used for nefarious purposes.
>  
> http://tinyurl.com/cameroon-danger
> Maybe the ccTLD should start watching out who is buying the domain and what they are being used for on an ongoing basis.
> 
> Regards,
> Douglas Onyango +256(0712)981329
> 
> Life is the educators practical joke in which you spend the first half learning, and the second half learning that everything you learned was wrong.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 2
> Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 10:40:15 +0100
> From: Anne-Rachel Inn? <annerachel at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [AfrICANN-discuss] Cameroon's .cm the Most Dangerous
> domain
> To: africann at afrinic.net, AfTLD Discuss <aftld-discuss at aftld.org>
> Message-ID:
> <bd1bfd500912030140j4967278exc88bd57c8ebfe905 at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> 
> All wishing to get the full report can check the follwoing website:
> http://us.mcafee.com/en-us/local/docs/Mapping_Mal_Web.pdf
> 
> <http://us.mcafee.com/en-us/local/docs/Mapping_Mal_Web.pdf>Thanks much
> Douglas!
> ar
> 
> On Thu, Dec 3, 2009 at 9:52 AM, Douglas Onyango <ondouglas at yahoo.com> wrote:
> 
> > Not so long a go google Cameroon's ranking hit unprecedented levels, this
> > was a good thing, but is now being used for nefarious purposes.
> >
> > *http://tinyurl.com/cameroon-danger*
> > Maybe the ccTLD should start watching out who is buying the domain and what
> > they are being used for on an ongoing basis.
> >
> > Regards,
> > Douglas Onyango +256(0712)981329
> > Life is the educators practical joke in which you spend the first half
> > learning, and the second half learning that everything you learned was
> > wrong.
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > AfrICANN mailing list
> > AfrICANN at afrinic.net
> > https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo.cgi/africann
> >
> >
> 
> 
> -- 
> Anne-Rachel Inne
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> 
> Message: 3
> Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 12:02:14 +0100
> From: Anne-Rachel Inn? <annerachel at gmail.com>
> Subject: [AfrICANN-discuss] Call for local hosts for 2010 IPv6
> Training
> To: africann at afrinic.net, AfTLD Discuss <aftld-discuss at aftld.org>
> Cc: adam at neoip.com, adel at afcomnetwork.net, Carmelo Modu Ebuka
> <carmelo.modu at gmail.com>, Nigerpac SONITEL <soloke at intnet.ne>,
> manga.gilles at yahoo.fr, tecleh at tse.com.er, Ismael Otban Ali
> <otban at intnet.dj>, benchoppy at ict.gov.sc, mabuzar at gov.sz, Adamou Iro
> <a_iro at yahoo.fr>, ko_hilaire at yahoo.fr, charles Gaye
> <charlesg1075 at yahoo.com>, "Ebrima D. Jobe" <ebouj2001 at yahoo.com>,
> Arnold <arnold at seychelles.net>, Marwan Maghur <marwan at lttnet.com>
> Message-ID:
> <bd1bfd500912030302l682715f0o323e227858478d3a at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> 
> [AfriNIC-announce] Call for Local Hosts for 2010 IPv6 Training
> From:
> Mukom Akong TAMON <tamon at afrinic.net>
> Add to Contacts To:announce at afrinic.net; member-discuss at afrinic.net
> ------------------------------
> Dear all,
> With your assistance, we were able to organise eight (8) workshops in 2009
> (including the workshop held in Dakar during AfriNIC 11). We were however
> unable to conduct planned trainings in Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Gambia
> and Mali and had to postpone a scheduled training in Gambia to 2010. We are
> therefore calling on your support once again for organizing training
> workshops in 2010. We intend to conduct training (LIR and IPv6) in the
> following countries:
> 
> South Africa
> Zimbabwe
> Swaziland
> Gambia
> Mali
> Sierra Leone
> Liberia
> Rwanda
> Equatorial Guinea
> Central African Republic
> Niger
> Seychelles
> Djibouti
> Eritrea
> Libya
> 
> 
> We already have potential Local hosts for Gambia and Mali (more
> collaborators are still welcome).
> 
> As a local host for your country, your responsibilities shall be to:
> 1. Secure a venue for the training (AfriNIC will pay for it)
> 2. Provide broadband Internet access plus wireless connectivity in the
> training room for the duration of the training.
> 3. Provide multimedia projectors, white-board and white-board markers.
> 4. Assist with facilitating visas for trainers and locating suitable hotels
> for them.
> 5. Provide general logistical support to ensure smooth operation of the
> workshop (seek and negotiate vendors for basic services, provide interns to
> help with during the workshop).
> 
> Please indicate interest in hosting a training for your country by
> responding to this message.
> 
> Thank your for your kind cooperation.
> 
> -- ________________________________________________________
> Mukom Akong TAMON
> AfriNIC Ltd | Phone: +230 466 6616 | Fax: +230 466 6758
> 
> _______________________________________________
> announce mailing list
> announce at afrinic.net
> https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo.cgi/announce
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> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 4
> Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 16:34:06 +0100
> From: Anne-Rachel Inn? <annerachel at gmail.com>
> Subject: [AfrICANN-discuss] .AT un nouveau cap vient d'etre franchi!
> To: africann at afrinic.net
> Message-ID:
> <bd1bfd500912030734v19f67c57s575656ab8af1ea28 at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252
> 
> http://www.domainesinfo.fr/extension/2056/autriche-un-nouveau-cap-vient-d-etre-franchi.php
> 
> Par Raphael TESSIER
> raphael.tessier at indom.com
> 
> Un nouveau cap vient d’être franchi !
> 
> Le registre du .AT vient d’annoncer sont
> 900 000ème enregistrements de noms de domaine.
> 
> L’extension Autrichienne ouverte à tous, particuliers comme sociétés,
> affiche une progression annuelle de
> 10 % en moyenne et ce depuis plus de 10 ans. A ce rythme, elle devrait
> dépasser le million de noms de domaine courant 2011.
> 
> Comparée aux 13 millions de noms de domaine en .DE (Allemagne) ou aux
> 3 millions de .EU (Europe), la performance du .AT peut paraître toute
> relative.
> 
> Cependant, l’Autriche est un petit pays d’un point de vue
> démographique : avec une population estimée à 8 210 281 Autrichiens en
> 2009, le pourcentage de noms de domaine par habitant est de presque 11
> %, un chiffre que la France, avec 2,3 noms de domaine en .FR pour 100
> habitants, est loin d’atteindre.
> 
> Le commentaire de DomainesInfo
> 
> L’Autriche compte plus de 72 % d’utilisateurs d’Internet et la langue
> officielle "l’allemand" fait de ce pays un marché à envisager
> notamment pour les sociétés déjà présentes en Allemagne sur Internet
> avec un .DE. Rappelons enfin que le .AT accepte les caractères
> accentués (ä, ü, à, ñ, ð…) depuis 2004.
> 
> Pour déposez un .AT cliquez ici.
> 
> 
> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 5
> Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 19:07:11 +0100
> From: Anne-Rachel Inn? <annerachel at gmail.com>
> Subject: [AfrICANN-discuss] DNS Explianed - video by CENTR
> To: africann at afrinic.net, AfTLD Discuss <aftld-discuss at aftld.org>
> Message-ID:
> <bd1bfd500912031007x288a5463l8d6debce1e0ff54d at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> 
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hcaJ1Vp_Ntg
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> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 6
> Date: Thu, 3 Dec 2009 20:38:51 +0100
> From: Anne-Rachel Inn? <annerachel at gmail.com>
> Subject: [AfrICANN-discuss] Thought leaders for the Internet era.
> To: africann at afrinic.net
> Message-ID:
> <bd1bfd500912031138v7a7bcd3dl8dfe74bc9c337acf at mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"
> 
> The List, 2020 Edition
> http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/11/29/the_list_2020_edition?page=0,1
> <http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/11/29/the_list_2020_edition?page=0,1>Thought
> leaders for the Internet era. BY EVGENY MOROZOV | DECEMBER
> 2009<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/issues/176/contents/>
> 
> The world’s next great thinkers may well be just as brilliant as the ones
> on this list<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/11/30/the_fp_top_100_global_thinkers>,
> but they’re likely to come to our notice in very different ways. Take
> William Kamkwamba, a 22-year-old from Malawi who already exemplifies a new
> generation of global leaders. A few years ago, he came upon an illustration
> of a windmill in an old textbook in a language (English) he barely
> understood and built one for his family so their house could have
> electricity. Soon he was thinking of ways to mass-produce his invention for
> distribution as ready-made kits.
> 
> Twenty years ago, Kamkwamba’s story might have stayed local. But instead he
> had the fortune of colliding with today’s Web-enabled global structure of
> intellectual intermediaries. In 2006, an innovation-focused blog called
> Hacktivate stumbled upon a write-up about Kamkwamba’s windmill in a Malawian
> newspaper. It took only a few months for a network of global thinkers and
> entrepreneurs calledTED <http://www.ted.com/> (full disclosure: I am a TED
> fellow) to pick up the story. In 2007, Kamkwamba spoke at a TED conference
> in Tanzania<http://www.ted.com/talks/william_kamkwamba_on_building_a_windmill.html>,
> where he mingled with Bono and Jane Goodall, and in 2009 he cowrote a
> best-selling book about his experience called *The Boy Who Harnessed the
> Wind<http://www.amazon.com/Boy-Who-Harnessed-Wind-Electricity/dp/0061730327/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1259519131&sr=8-1>
> *.
> 
> Will Kamkwamba be the next Sergey Brin? We don’t know yet. But his story
> suggests just how dramatically the Internet era has transformed the very
> process of becoming a global thinker -- that is, the process of learning to
> get smart and heard at the same time -- and how much those changes are for
> the better.
> 
> In the old, pre-Internet model, aspiring thought leaders and idea
> entrepreneurs had to establish residence either in one of the big cultural
> metropolises or, failing that, a college town with a decent library. Now,
> however, the very prospect of living in an “intellectual metropolis” has
> become nearly obsolete. As Harper’s Bill Wasik pointed out recently, “[The
> Internet is] a place that courses with all the raw ambition and creative
> energy that the hard times seem to have drained from New York.” As long as
> you pay your Internet bill, you might as well live in Skjolden, Norway, or
> in a hut next to Walden Pond.
> 
> The Internet is also democratizing education, making overspecialized and
> prohibitively expensive graduate schools ever harder to justify. With the
> Kindle, printable e-books, and now potentially Google’s scanned world
> library, the price of books is rapidly approaching zero. Just as the
> invention of the printing press allowed books to be mass-produced for the
> first time, making them readily available for the middle class, the new
> economics of the Web make books freely available to anyone with access to a
> computer. And English, the lingua franca of today’s intellectual world, is
> easier and cheaper than ever to learn, with millions of potential tutors
> just a Skype call away.
> 
> Many leading American universities are also publishing content from their
> best professors online. Now anyone can watch historian Donald Kagan’s
> lectures about ancient Greece on Yale University’s Web
> site<http://www.yale.edu/> or
> match wits with Paul Krugman’s old economics exams at mit.edu. Harvard
> University philosopher Michael Sandel is releasing online video lectures of
> his oversubscribed course on justice, supplementing them with online
> discussion guides. A cursory look at peer-to-peer networks like Demonoid or
> even the infamous Pirate Bay <http://thepiratebay.org/> -- most commonly
> used for file-sharing -- reveals that much of the content swapped on them is
> educational, from 1970s BBC documentaries to the eclectic courses produced
> by the Teaching Company. Judging by the comments on the file-sharing sites,
> many of their customers are in the developing world.
> 
> The world’s next crop of thought leaders will also have superior tools of
> transmission at their fingertips. Getting your piece on the op-ed page of
> the *New York Times <http://www.nytimes.com/>* or an essay into the *New
> York Review of Books <http://www.nybooks.com/>* is no longer the only way to
> credential yourself as a serious thinker. Starting your own blog,
> contributing to a site like the *Huffington
> Post*<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/> or
> the *Daily Beast* <http://www.thedailybeast.com/>, writing a Web column for
> a newspaper, or penning an occasional guest post somewhere online can help
> to get your name out there much more quickly and, perhaps, even more
> effectively.
> 
> And once you’re out there -- even if, like William Kamkwamba, you don’t have
> access to the Internet yourself -- the Internet has sprouted a number of
> influential intermediaries, aggregators, and bloggers who can take you the
> next step. TED -- and its growing collection of video talks, distributed to
> legions of iTunes fans around the world—is just one example. Another is
> TED’s competitor PopTech <http://www.poptech.org/> and its Social Innovation
> Fellows program.
> 
> This revolution in access to knowledge means that in 10 to 15 years, the
> global landscape of ideas will look completely different. It will no longer
> be centralized in the West because schooling in everything from the classics
> to windmill construction to modern art will be available to people in any
> country without leaving home. The ability to work from anywhere also makes
> the life of the mind a good deal cheaper. The new generation of public
> intellectuals, though still cosmopolitan in outlook, will be much more
> firmly embedded in their own locales, without the inferiority complex of old
> about their Western peers; in other words, expect more Pankaj Mishra than
> V.S. Naipaul.
> 
> Their debates will also be entirely different. A decade from now, instead of
> factions of Western (or at least Western-trained) thinkers arguing it out on
> the op-ed pages of the *Financial Times* or the lounges of Davos, we may
> well see this new generation of intellectuals from the developing world,
> home-educated but globally minded, speaking publicly and forcefully from
> blogs, columns, and their own intellectual reviews. The debate on climate
> change would no longer be dominated by a Danish economist fighting a former
> U.S. vice president, but instead might feature a Chinese environmental
> blogger and a promising Indian scientist.
> 
> The Internet may not turn us into a global village, but a global
> intellectual salon it already is.
> Save over 50% when you *subscribe* to
> FP.<https://www.kable.com/pub/frnp/fpSubscriptionOffer.asp?src=NIAL1P>
> 
> Flickr user Erik (HASH) Hersman under a Creative Commons license
> 
> 
> Evgeny Morozov is Yahoo! fellow at Georgetown University.
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> 
> End of AfrICANN Digest, Vol 34, Issue 8
> ***************************************
 		 	   		  
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