Forwarding on behalf of OARC.
--
Ngā mihi
Felipe Agnelli Barbosa
DNS Specialist
InternetNZ | Ipurangi Aotearoa
We are the home of .nz and we work for an Internet that benefits all of
Aotearoa.
www.internetnz.nz
GPG: 95C1 8BDC EFA7 9CAC 303D 003E A058 2449 D152 8580
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Cathy Almond <cathya(a)isc.org>
Date: Wed, Apr 30, 2025 at 1:45 PM
Subject: [dns-operations] OARC 45 Call for Contributions
To: <dns-operations(a)lists.dns-oarc.net>
The OARC 45 workshop Call for Contributions is now open!
This workshop will be a hybrid event.
Date - 7-8 October 2025
Location - Stockholm, Sweden
Time - Approx 10:00 CEST (08:00 UTC) - 17:00 CEST (15:00 UTC)
Adjacent to Netnod Tech Meeting 2025 (9 October 2025)
(https://www.netnod.se/netnod-tech-meeting-2025)
Deadline for Submissions - 2025-07-29 23:59 UTC
https://indico.dns-oarc.net/event/55/abstracts/
All DNS-related subjects and discussion topics are welcome although
we're particularly
keen to hear more about operational and security related experiences,
best practices and
practical advice; both for newcomers to the DNS arena and those who have
been
around for longer who want to learn more about new features and
opportunities to
improve resilience, security and privacy. (These topics we think will
complement the
usual high-quality data-based research submissions we always hope to
receive!)
If you have something interesting to share with the community that lies
outside of
the focus above, please don't be put off - if it's good, we'll be happy
to include it.
If you'd like to offer a talk, but are not quite sure what to pick,
here's a non-exhaustive list
of ideas:
1. Operations & Deployment
Configuration management, deployment processes, and interoperability
experiences.
Tools, tips, and making effective use of DNS software features.
2. Performance, Resilience & Scaling
Provisioning, load-balancing, and planning for resilience.
DNS performance management, efficiency improvements, and metrics.
Monitoring infrastructure: log pipelines, analytics, and anomaly detection.
3. Security, Privacy & Policy
DoS attacks, DNS abuse, DNSSEC signing and validation.
Privacy considerations, for example: encrypted transport, qname
minimization, data anonymization.
Relevant global and regional policies, legislation, and compliance.
4. Research & Innovation
Data-driven testing, measurement, and analysis.
New protocols, protocol extensions, and next-generation namespace
management.
5. Lessons & Learnings
Outage experiences, recovery stories, and cautionary tales
For further details please see https://www.dns-oarc.net/oarc45
Cathy Almond, for the DNS-OARC Programme Committee
_______________________________________________
dns-operations mailing list
dns-operations(a)lists.dns-oarc.net
https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-operations
InternetNZ will begin a DNSSEC Zone Signing Key rollover in our current
standby chain.
This should not affect the active chain used in DNS resolution for .nz.
The status and scheduling will be posted to status.internetnz.nz.
This will consist of two maintenance windows, in each window we will pause
zone distribution to make changes, perform validation, and resume zone
distribution for the following zones:
nz, ac.nz, co.nz, cri.nz, geek.nz, gen.nz, govt.nz, health.nz, iwi.nz,
kiwi.nz, maori.nz, mil.nz, net.nz, org.nz, parliament.nz, and school.nz
The first change window is on the following link:
https://status.internetnz.nz/incidents/wh80pfs8w3z2
For questions or issues please contact registry(a)internetnz.net.nz, for
updates please subscribe to the IRS Production > Zone Publish component of
status.internetnz.nz
--
Ngā mihi
Felipe Agnelli Barbosa
DNS Specialist
InternetNZ | Ipurangi Aotearoa
We are the home of .nz and we work for an Internet that benefits all of
Aotearoa.
www.internetnz.nz
GPG: 95C1 8BDC EFA7 9CAC 303D 003E A058 2449 D152 8580
The conference starts tomorrow. The programme is at
https://www.nznog.org/conferences/nznog-2025/programme
There is a lightning talks session again so we will be looking for
anyone with a quick five to ten minute presentation/talk/rant they would
like to give in that session. If that is you, please email talks(a)nznog.org.
I think some people here will remember Dave. He was a powerhouse.
Brian
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [ih] In loving memory of (Mr. Bufferbloat) Dave Täht <3
Date: Tue, 1 Apr 2025 10:47:51 -0700
From: the keyboard of geoff goodfellow via Internet-history <internet-history(a)elists.isoc.org>
Reply-To: the keyboard of geoff goodfellow <geoff(a)iconia.com>
To: Internet-history <internet-history(a)elists.isoc.org>
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Frantisek Borsik <frantisek.borsik(a)gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Apr 1, 2025 at 7:27 PM
Subject: In loving memory of Dave Täht <3
Hello to all,
We’re devastated to announce that Dave Täht has passed away.
<https://libreqos.io/2025/04/01/in-loving-memory-of-dave/>
Dave was an amazing man, helping the world with FQ-CoDel and CAKE, fighting
bufferbloat and trying to make the world a better place. Always willing to
help, and without him – LibreQoS (and the other QoE solutions out there)
wouldn’t exist.
Dave was an inspiration, and we all miss him. We’re reaching out to family
and close friends to see if there’s anything we can do to help.
Dave was an inspiration to us. Dave’s contributions to Linux, FQ-CoDel, and
CAKE improved internet connectivity around the world for millions of
people. Because of him, millions of people now have access to reliable
video calls – and in turn, access to loved ones, healthcare, and community.
One of Robert’s ISP customers is a kind paraplegic woman who lives in a
far-flung rural Colonia around El Paso, Texas. Her reliable access to her
doctors through telemedicine, and to her family through FaceTime, was only
made possible because of his algorithms. There are millions of cases like
hers, where Dave’s contributions have silently enabled human connection and
safety. Everything Dave contributed to the world of technology was free and
open source, for the betterment of humanity.
Dave is the reason that Starlink was able to tackle its latency issues –
enabling a generation of young entrepreneurs across the developing world,
such as these young folks pictured in the Phillipines, to start their own
ISPs to expand internet access to their communities. Dave started work on
FQ-CoDel in part because of his own journey working to expand internet
access in Nicaragua, so we know he saw that his work had come full-circle
and helped so many.
We’re incredibly grateful to have Dave as our friend, mentor, and as
someone who continuously inspired us – showing us that we could do better
for each other in the world, and leverage technology to make that happen.
He will be dearly missed.
*PS: *Dave is forever in our hearts and souls, in our routers and...in
production!
*https://github.com/LibreQoE/LibreQoS/pull/684
<https://github.com/LibreQoE/LibreQoS/pull/684>*
All the best,
Frank
Frantisek (Frank) Borsik
https://www.linkedin.com/in/frantisekborsik
Signal, Telegram, WhatsApp: +421919416714
iMessage, mobile: +420775230885
Skype: casioa5302ca
frantisek.borsik(a)gmail.com
--
Geoff.Goodfellow(a)iconia.com
living as The Truth is True
--
Internet-history mailing list
Internet-history(a)elists.isoc.org
https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/listinfo/internet-history
Hello!
AusNOG 2025 Call For Papers is now open!
We are looking for presentations that an audience working
predominantly in the network operating space will find interesting and
useful.
As always, we do not accept marketing or sales material as part of any
presentation.
The CFP will close on May 30th 2025. This allows time for the Program
Committee to review papers and choose the program.
Please express your interest and submit a short abstract of the topic
you'd like to present, via our portal;
https://cfp.ausnog.net/ausnog-2025/
Thank you, and see you in Melbourne, for AusNOG September 2025!
Event dates and details here; https://www.ausnog.net/
Regards,
Mark Duffell
on behalf of the AusNOG PC (Jocelyn, Joe, Phil, James & Michael)