|
|
|
|
|
by rosndo
1573 days ago
|
|
Regular folks will not suffer from slightly increased root NS latency, their resolver will cache the replies. The TTLs are long, root nameservers don’t need to be queried frequently. The world is full of countries without locally hosted root nameservers, they do just fine. That’s a vast body of evidence that directly contradicts this claim. Removing root nameservers from Russia would be an utterly meaningless gesture without any real world impact. > I have traveled in totalitarian countries and can confirm first-hand that they restrict civilian access to foreign DNS servers, both authoritative and resolver, and connectivity for "regular folks" is very much directly impacted. Russia does not do this. That’d be a completely separate issue. |
|
> Russia does not do this. That’d be a completely separate issue
Russia already does this. They literally made a law enabling it, a couple of years ago, and then ran a live test in the middle of 2021. Look up "sovereign internet bill". Aside from the great-firewall-wannabe provisions, it specifically enables a Kremlin-controlled fork of the DNS.
And yes, it's all there in Bill's remarks. I suggest reading them.