Posts Tagged CCTLDs

DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future

DNSSEC continues to be deployed in ccTLDs.  The animation below shows the history of DNSSEC adoption through today with predictions based on announcements and other communications going forward.  A high-resolution map of current deployment status is available here.

Animated GIF of DNSSEC adoption in ccTLDs

,

No Comments

DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future

DNSSEC continues to be deployed in ccTLDs.  The animation below shows the history of DNSSEC adoption through today with predictions based on announcements and other communications going forward.  A high-resolution map of current deployment status is available here.

Animated map of DNSSEC in ccTLDs

,

No Comments

DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future

We sent a survey to ccTLD administrators about their adoption of DNSSEC.  Below is a new animated map based on the initial flurry of responses we received.  Many zones which we knew from observation to have their DS in the root turn out to be accepting delegations and are, therefore, fully operational!  A high resolution PDF map is available here.

 

cctld-dnssec-2013-02-19

,

No Comments

DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future

This animated GIF shows announced, estimated, and actual DNSSEC adoption by ccTLDs from January 2006 through July 2015 as of 1 February 2013.  We’d like to see a more colorful, even completely green, map in the future.  We also have a high-resolution PDF map of the world with ccTLD DNSSEC adoption as of 1 February 2013 here.

The maps are a work in progress.  We’re pretty sure about the past and present.    If you manage a ccTLD and have a schedule for deployment or have updates/corrections, let us know at info @ dnssec-deployment.org.

cctld-2013-02-01

,

No Comments

DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future

Thanks for the update, .ES!

This animated GIF shows announced, estimated, and actual DNSSEC adoption by ccTLDs from January 2006 through July 2014 as of 2 July 2012.  The map is a work in progress.  We’re pretty sure about the past and present.    If you manage a ccTLD and have a schedule for deployment or have updates/corrections, let us know at info @ dnssec-deployment.org.  We’d like to see a more colorful, even completely red, map in the future.

,

No Comments

Menu for .UA DNSSEC deployment

Dmitry Kohmanyuk

Dmitry Kohmanyuk

At ICANN43, Steve Crocker, ICANN Board Chairman and DNSSEC Deployment Initiative memember, met with Dmitry Kohmanyuk, the .UA hostmaster.  On the back of  a menu for the Gala Dinner, Dmitry outlined the plans for .UA DNSSEC deployment.

Crocker notes

This makes the set of DNSSEC deployment maps I presented on the 14th obsolete, and I’m very happy about that.

 

Menu with schedule

Planned .UA DNSSEC a of 14 March 2012

(As with other menus, substitutions may occur)

  • Experimental:  1 March 2012
  • Announcement: 3 December 2011
  • Partial Operation: 1 April 2012
  • DS in Root: 15 April 2012
  • Full Operation: 1 December 2012

 

 

,

1 Comment

DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future

This animated GIF shows announced, estimated, and actual DNSSEC adoption by ccTLDs from January 2006 through July 2014 as of March 6, 2012.  The map is a work in progress.  We’re pretty sure about the past and present.    If you manage a ccTLD and have a schedule for deployment or have updates/corrections, let us know at info @ dnssec-deployment.org.  We’d like to see a more colorful, even completely red, map in the future.

Animated GIF of DNSSEC adoption in TLDs

Animated GIF of DNSSEC adoption in TLDs

Key:

  • Experimental:  We have reason to believe the ccTLD is experimenting with DNSSEC.
  • Announced:  The ccTLD has announced that they will support DNSSEC.
  • Partial Operation:  The ccTLD is signed, though possibly doesn’t have its DS in the root or  isn’t taking signed delegations.
  • DS in Root:  The ccTLD has placed its DS in the root.
  • Operational :  The ccTLD is signed, its DS is in the root, and it is taking signed delegations.

,

No Comments

SIDN to sign dot-NL in August:

SIDN, the registry for The Netherlands’ dot-NL and ENUM, announced it will implement DNSSEC one month after the root zone is signed in July, setting its implementation for August 2010. SIDN CEO Roelof Meijer said, “Waiting until the root is signed means that we won’t need to implement any interim solutions – which inevitably increase the risk of errors – and it will be possible to sign the whole chain at once. We believe that this is the best and safest way to implement DNSSEC for the dot-NL zone.”

, ,

No Comments