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Pirate Bay co-founder proposes peer-to-peer DNS

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Although it’s barely more than an idea at the moment, Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde has sent another big ripple through the Internet: Sunde has proposed applying the peer-to-peer technology of BitTorrent to the Internet’s DNS system, decentralizing domain resolution from the central authority of ICANN’s policy-making and collection of root servers and offering an “uncensored” lookup system for the Internet.

“Having a centralized system that controls our information flow is not acceptable,” Sunde wrote in a brief blog posting. “By using existing technology for de-centralization together with already having a crew with skilled programmers, communicators, and network specialists, an alternative system is not far away. We’re not going to re-invent the wheel, we’re going to build on existing technology as much as possible.”

Although still in very early stages, the project takes aim at the fundamental underpinnings of the Internet—DNS, or the Domain Name System. DNS is what converts human-readable site names like www.digitaltrends.com into machine-usable addresses (like 173.203.139.99, a so-called “dotted quad” of an IPv4 address) so computers can contact each other to send and receive information. DNS resolution underlies the vast majority of Internet connections, whether it be instant messaging, email, streaming video, gaming, file transfer, or a myriad of other applications. Although essentially all ISPs run DNS services for their customers, all those DNS services refer “upstream” for queries they can’t answer themselves—like addresses for computers on other networks or in other countries. At the top of the pyramid are a collection of DNS “root servers” operated by ICANN, the International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. ICANN also decides who can be an accredited domain registrar, what top-level domains (like .com or .tv) can exist, and grapples with a number of other Internet governance issues.

Sunde’s proposed P2P DNS would build on the same technology underlying the BitTorrent peer-to-peer file sharing technology, relying on millions of individual computers to host and serve alternative DNS information rather than constantly referring back to centralized root servers. Sunde says the system would traffic in secure and signed data, but because of its centralized nature—like BitTorrent—there would be no effective way for governments or other authorities to prevent sites and services from being looked up. Sunde apparently has proof-of-concept code and is working to develop an RFC (Request for Comments) standards document, although there is no timeline on the project.

Sunde is currently facing prison time for contributing to copyright infringement for his activities with the Pirate Bay BitTorrent site.

Some of the impetus behind an alternative DNS system is the United States’ seizure of nearly 80 domains on the grounds that they violated copyright.

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Geoff Duncan
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Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
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