[ISN] DNS inventor calls for security overhaul

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Sat Apr 12 2003 - 01:04:29 PDT

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    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/7/30224.html
    
    By John Leyden
    Posted: 11/04/2003
    
    Web site impersonation could become as great a risk as ID theft, Paul
    Mockapetris, the co-inventor of DNS warns.
    
    Waiting in the wings is a better security standard for the Internet's
    Domain Name System. It's called DNSSec, and it uses digital signatures
    to guard against impersonation. But political wrangles are holding up
    adoption, Mockapetris claims.
    
    A denial of service attack last October which took out seven of the
    Internet's 13 DNS root-name servers last October, highlighted the
    fragility of the Internet's addressing system. Mockapetris, chief
    scientist at Internet infrastructure firm Nominum, reckons the threat
    has been overplayed: people are neglecting greater, related risks, he
    told us.
    
    Since the data in root-name servers changes infrequently a denial of
    service attack has relatively little impact, unless it goes on for
    days, he argues. That's because key data is cached locally by large
    ISPs and enterprises.
    
    However an attack against country level DNS, or worse, a successful
    attempt to counterfeit DNS data would have far greater impact.
    
    To date there have been few such attacks, apart from the recent
    onslaught against the Al-Jazeera network. But the current DNS system
    provides no guarantees against impersonation and must be updated,
    Mockapetris argues.
    
    The Internet Engineering Task Force has yet to ratify DNSSec, designed
    to underpin the system with security keys and certificates to create a
    "chain of trust" in some ways similar to extranet systems. According
    to Mockapetris, ratification of the standard, which has been in
    development for years, is still at least six months off.
    
    Politics, rather than technology issues, are the main reason for the
    delay, he claims. Holding up progress are arguments over whether or
    not to grant ICANN the role as a trusted third party signing root
    keys, and disagreements over where a company should make all its
    domains secure at the same time.
    
    Public Key Infrastructure systems have failed to storm the market as
    forecast, largely because of deployment headaches and incompatibility
    between different vendors.
    
    Mockapetris believes a lightweight ("lean and mean") PKI
    infrastructure built into the DNS system through DNSSec has a much
    greater chance of becoming ubiquitous. The system could plug into
    browsers and provide for an automatic way to exchange keys.  
    Cryptographic work would be done at the client by DNSSec-aware
    applications so DNS lookup speed will not suffer. This approach would
    allow secure DNS look-up by users - even if their own ISPs hadn't
    upgraded their DNS servers.
    
    Government and financial service institutions could be using DNS Sec
    within two years and the standard could become ubiquitous in five
    years time, Mockapetris believes.
    
    The system would mean surfers are guaranteed that they are taken to
    the Web site they intended to visit. DNS Sec would increase safeguards
    and detect attempts to impersonate sites, guarding against fraudulent
    Web scams.
    
    Mockapetris sees the system as operating at a lower level than site
    certificates, which he described as a "complementary technology. I
    don't believe in the grand unification theory."
    
    He describes DNS Sec as a first level ID check, which is still vital
    to build trust on the Net. "If you don't have secure DNS, how can you
    trust higher level protocols?"
    
    A security model for DNS would bolster Web services and help secure IP
    telephony. Fraud and impersonation will run rampant without this
    security model, according to Mockapetris.
    
    The DNS system provides a means for domain names to be translated into
    Internet Protocol addresses. DNS underpins email delivery and Web
    browsing.
    
    Mockapetris co-invented the domain name system (DNS) in collaboration
    with the late Jon Postel) in 1983. He received an IEEE Internet Award
    this year for this work.
    
    
    
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