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Resistance
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Title: BitTorrent Based DNS To Counter US Domain Seizures -
Source: torrentfreak.com
URL Source: http://torrentfreak.com/bittorrent- ... ter-us-domain-seizures-101130/
Published: Nov 30, 2010
Author: Ernesto
Post Date: 2011-01-15 16:06:17 by F.A. Hayek Fan
Keywords: None
Views: 327
Comments: 24

The domain seizures by the United States authorities in recent days and upcoming legislation that could make similar takeovers even easier in the future, have inspired a group of enthusiasts to come up with a new, decentralized and BitTorrent-powered DNS system. This system will exchange DNS information through peer-to-peer transfers and will work with a new .p2p domain extension.

In a direct response to the domain seizures by US authorities during the last few days, a group of established enthusiasts have started working on a DNS system that can’t be touched by any governmental institution.

Ironically, considering the seizure of the Torrent-Finder meta-search engine domain, the new DNS system will be partly powered by BitTorrent.

In recent months, global anti-piracy efforts have increasingly focused on seizing domains of allegedly infringing sites. In the United States the proposed COICA bill is explicitly aimed at increasing the government’s censorship powers, but seizing a domain name is already quite easy, as illustrated by ICE and Department of Justice actions last weekend and earlier this year.

For governments it is apparently quite easy to take over the DNS entries of domains, not least because several top level domains are managed by US-based corporations such as VeriSign, who work closely together with the US Department of Commerce. According to some, this setup is a threat to the open internet.

To limit the power governments have over domain names, a group of enthusiasts has started working on a revolutionary system that can not be influenced by a government institution, or taken down by pulling the plug on a central server. Instead, it is distributed by the people, with help from a BitTorrent-based application that people install on their computer.

According to the project’s website, the goal is to “create an application that runs as a service and hooks into the hosts DNS system to catch all requests to the .p2p TLD while passing all other request cleanly through. Requests for the .p2p TLD will be redirected to a locally hosted DNS database.”

“By creating a .p2p TLD that is totally decentralized and that does not rely on ICANN or any ISP’s DNS service, and by having this application mimic force-encrypted BitTorrent traffic, there will be a way to start combating DNS level based censoring like the new US proposals as well as those systems in use in countries around the world including China and Iran amongst others.”

The Dot-P2P project was literally started a few days ago, but already the developers are making great progress. It is expected that a beta version of the client can be released relatively shortly, a team member assured TorrentFreak.

The project has been embraced by many familiar names in the P2P-community. Former Pirate Bay spokesman Peter Sunde is among them, and the people from EZTV have been promoting it as well.

“For me it’s mostly to scare back. To show that if they try anything, we have weapons of making it harder for them to abuse it. If they then back down, we win,” Peter Sunde told TorrentFreak in a comment.

Although the initiators of the project are still debating on various technical issues on how the system should function, it seems that the administrative part has been thought out. The .p2p domain registration will be handled by OpenNIC, an alternative community based DNS network. OpenNIC also maintains the .geek, .free, .null and several other top level domains.

On the other hand, there are also voices that are for distributed domain registration, which would keep the system entirely decentralized.

The domain registrations will be totally free, but registrants will have to show that they own a similar domain with a different extension first, to prevent scammers from taking over a brand.

The new P2P-based DNS system will require users to run an application on their own computer before they can access the domains, but there are also plans to create a separate root-server (like OpenNIC) as a complimentary service. It’s worth noting that the DNS changes will only affect the new .p2p domains, it will not interfere with access to any other domains.

It will be interesting to see in what direction this project goes and how widely it will be adopted. There are already talks of getting Internet Service Providers to accept the .p2p extension as well, but even if this doesn’t happen the system can always be accessed through the BitTorrent-powered application and supporting DNS servers.

If anything, this shows that no matter what legislation or legal actions are taken, technology stays always one step ahead. The more aggressive law enforcement gets, the more creative and motivated adopters of the Open Internet will respond.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9.

#6. To: F.A. Hayek Fan (#0)

If anything, this shows that no matter what legislation or legal actions are taken, technology stays always one step ahead. The more aggressive law enforcement gets, the more creative and motivated adopters of the Open Internet will respond.

Yessirreee... that's been my call for a long time. Hackers will win each and every info battle.

Pinguinite  posted on  2011-01-16   2:57:35 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Pinguinite, christine, Lod, F.A. Hayek Fan (#6)

Just look at the volunteers to provide resources they've already had in just a few days.

I think projects like this and WikiLeaks signals the rise of a global Wikifolk. Digital rebels. People like the Pirate Party in Sweden. As governments around the world move to adopt DRM and IP laws in accord with the American empire, we see people rising up around the world to oppose their plans.

Servers

I can offer servers/rack space and network connectivity in Stockholm, Sweden. I will donate any amount of servers for the infrastructure.

Email me: luke@swedehost.se

--swedehost

Can offer 1 1GB node in the US and 1 1GB coming online soon in the UK, right now used as tor exit nodes.

And I am willing to herd cats, on the infrastructure side of the house.

---Punkbob 00:14, 1 December 2010 (CET)

I have a VPS which I would be willing to use for this cause. Nothing special, but I guess every little bit counts? In Pennsylvania, 50gb HDD and 1tb traffic/mo. Speeds are moderate.

I also hereby elect myself a test puppet for anything on linux.

--nullh

Infrastructure, can provide server time/hosting etc *nix. Located in New Zealand.

---kinetic

I can offer multiple VPSs in different DC's, mainly European based.

I have a lightly loaded box in a colo in Tx with 100mbit Gemlog

---Ani

can offer VPS's in Denver, CO, USA at Level3, and Germany for public resolvers.

---scottgalvin scott [at] scottgalvin.com

can offer VPS's in Sydney, Equinix. Small scale

--snyper


I have 1 tb/month to spare at a data center near Detroit MI USA.

--Glyph


I have a dedicated machine in Milwaukee, WI that I can offer usage of.

Storage around 50gb, VERY upgradable (have on-site ready access)

100MB connection

Email: eeb [at] netwurx [dot] net

--Eamon


I can offer up hosting services out of Atlanta,GA

100mb connection

Also have a 4 server DNS cluster - Locations in San Jose, CA , Los Angeles, CA , Dallas,TX and Atlanta,GA

--FLDataTeK fldatatek- [at] yahoo [dot] com


I can offer two dedicated powerful servers in Luxembourg hooked up to a gigabit line with no bandwidth limitations - only restrictions of being placed into the 95th percentile after 5tb.

Both are AMD 6000+, 8gb ram, 1.5tb hard drive.

Contact me and I will be happy to offer up bandwidth, space or computing power. I am an experienced linux/unix admin and would be happy to help

zaitsevs [at] gmail [dot] com -- zaitsevs


--Ryan rdesign.me [at] gmail.com

Happy to discuss potential infrastructure in numerous locations, access to servers in 11 countries currently.


--fifi [at] hax.org

Physical and virtual infrastructure on the east and west coasts of the US. Direct peering to numerous large NSPs


--Brian Hill - admin [at] uswgo.com


I will gladly mirror the final executable files (If there is a Windows release) and even Linux executive files on my site. I will publicly add a picture on my front page on the sidebar letting people know that my site is mirroring your final files. I will also mirror license files and source codes.


-- Joshua D'Alton - thelen.shar [at] gmail.com

Company PulsedMedia.com sell seedbox and VPS, 100+ servers could be available.


-- Cal Leeming - cal.leeming@simplicitymedialtd.co.uk

2 UK servers, 1 US server, can run initial seed server if necessary.


-- vehk1s lari.vehkalampi [at] gmail [dot] com

2 Fin servers with 8/1m bandwith, no data limit


-- hugo ucentric [at] hotmail [dot] com

1 CZ server with 1TB store & no data limit.

--

1 US server with 200gb/month data

-- viking


---Frantech

They are willing to help with bandwidth in the HE datacenter.


--Flink I have a Linux box with a couple hundred GB to spare on a 25Mbps connection.

--atiti I also have a few boxes in Luxembourg and Denmark, I could host some stuff on.

-- jakub.nadolny [at] gmail [dot] com 1 server located in France, 1TB, 100Mbps or 1Gbps if required

-- lkoch57 [at] hotmail [dot] com I have a Intel Dual Xeon server with Ubuntu installed, I used as a test server but willing to offer it for use

-- sebcap26 I have a VPS 1Gb RAM / 10Gb HDD, Debian 4 etch. I Have personal websites and data on it, but If Node test server is needed, I can help.

-- jason@forwardnow.net Unlimited virtual hosting accounts, if the government doesn't shut it down for pointing subdomain to wikileaks for the brief period of its domainlessness.

-- nikomo [at] nikomo [dot] eu I have an IPv6-only VPS running in Moscow I could dedicate completely to this.

-- info [at] noagendareport.com Media publishing groupe with own network with over 400 000 followers . Infrastructure consist of several dedicated servers also have available servers if need to. Coders and designers that have wast experience. Servers allocated in asia , EU and US unlimited bandwidth and virtually unlimited storage.

--- dot-p2p [at] lo-res [dot] org we can offer a vps housed in a non-commercial serverhousing project, ipv4 and ipv6. no data limits. location in Austria, Europe.

--- stybla ~ VM(s) for testing or as a server. 40/40Mbit connection almost without limit. Physical machine could also be possible.; Location: CZ

ICANN and the feds don't stand a chance.

Given the number of Java developers who are signing up as developers, I'd expect a Vuze (Azureus) plug-in will be the first test platform for p2p-hosted DNS services.

TooConservative  posted on  2011-01-16   11:44:04 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: TooConservative (#8)

A coworker of my wife has a husband who has a CIS undergrad degree and is now working on an online CIS masters focusing on security and something called Information Assurance. He does some sort of database work at a data center in the area. Interestingly enough, he is pursuing the degree not to help his career but to have the knowledge to get around any government intervention in the internet. He was very excited about this article.

F.A. Hayek Fan  posted on  2011-01-16   11:57:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 9.

#10. To: F.A. Hayek Fan (#9)

He was very excited about this article.

Any tech guy would be.

In truth, we've all known of such solutions that can be readily achieved in short order and we've known for some time. Generally, when something like this comes along, it's not because some lone genius thought it. It's because tens of thousands of tech-oriented people have thought about independently and started discussing it.

So it isn't a breakthrough, more a moment of realization.

It's time to just do it. And tens of thousands of people know it and are willing to assemble together and self-organize, once again demonstrating the real and persistent threat of open-source development. It's not the code written that is a threat as much as it is the demonstration of what technical groups can achieve collectively via internet. And in short order.

By year's end, I expect at least 100,000 people will be actively involved in this effort.

TooConservative  posted on  2011-01-16 12:14:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 9.

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