Presentation suggestion for Chicago
Chris Morrow
morrowc at ops-netman.net
Wed Feb 22 01:53:23 UTC 2017
also sounds interesting.
At Tue, 21 Feb 2017 20:55:30 +0100,
Ondřej Surý <ondrej.sury at nic.cz> wrote:
>
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> Ok, so I have a presentation proposal for IEPG - the DNS Violations
> project. I will present the weird DNS stuff in the DNS we have found
> so far and the project itself. (Please note that I have also submitted
> this to DNS-OARC and maybe RIPE 74 DNS WG, as I suspect there will be
> less overlap than usual).
>
> Cheers,
> Ondřej
>
>
> On 21 February 2017 18:58:32 Warren Kumari <warren at kumari.net> wrote:
>
> > ... and a reminder to folk to propose presentations, etc for Chicago..?
> >
> >
> > W
> > On Tue, Feb 21, 2017 at 10:07 AM Chris Morrow <morrowc at ops-netman.net>
> > wrote:
> >
> >> At Mon, 20 Feb 2017 15:54:12 +0100,
> >> "Giovane C. M. Moura" <giovane.moura at sidn.nl> wrote:
> >> >
> >> > Dear chairs,
> >> >
> >> > We have a work that we'd like to submit for the next IEPG meeting in
> >> > Chicago.
> >> >
> >> > The paper, currently under review, is entitled " No domain left behind:
> >> > is Let's Encrypt democratizing encryption?" You can find it at [1].
> >> >
> >> > Relevance to the IEPG audience: our paper measures in fact
> >> > the efforts employed by the industry and the community to improve the
> >> > adoption of encryption. We show that once costs and complexity are
> >> > removed, we can pretty much have encryption adoption in bulk -- lessons
> >> > that can be generalized for other security-related deployment issues.
> >>
> >> sounds like fun!
> >>
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > More info below:
> >> >
> >> > Title: No domain left behind: is Let's Encrypt democratizing encryption?
> >> > Authors: Maarten Aertsen, Maciej Korczyński, Giovane C. M. Moura,
> >> > Samaneh Tajalizadehkhoob, Jan van den Berg
> >> >
> >> > Abstract: "
> >> > The 2013 National Security Agency revelations of pervasive
> >> > monitoring have lead to an "encryption rush" across the computer and
> >> > Internet industry. To push back against massive surveillance and protect
> >> > users privacy, vendors, hosting and cloud providers have widely deployed
> >> > encryption on their hardware, communication links, and applications. As
> >> > a consequence, the most of web traffic nowadays is encrypted. However,
> >> > there is still a significant part of Internet traffic that is not
> >> > encrypted. It has been argued that both costs and complexity associated
> >> > with obtaining and deploying X.509 certificates are major barriers for
> >> > widespread encryption, since these certificates are required to
> >> > established encrypted connections. To address these issues, the
> >> > Electronic Frontier Foundation, Mozilla Foundation, and the University
> >> > of Michigan have set up Let's Encrypt (LE), a certificate authority that
> >> > provides both free X.509 certificates and software that automates the
> >> > deployment of these certificates. In this paper, we investigate if LE
> >> > has been successful in democratizing encryption: we analyze certificate
> >> > issuance in the first year of LE and show from various perspectives that
> >> > LE adoption has an upward trend and it is in fact being successful in
> >> > covering the lower-cost end of the hosting market.
> >> >
> >> > [1] https://arxiv.org/abs/1612.03005
> >> >
> >> > thanks and best,
> >> >
> >> > /giovane
> >> > _______________________________________________
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> >
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