Independent Submission                                         M. Thomas
Request for Comments: 8023
Category: Informational                                        A. Mankin
ISSN: 2070-1721                                               Salesforce
                                                               L. Zhang
                                                                   UCLA
                                                          November 2016


                Report from the Workshop and Prize on
            Root Causes and Mitigation of Name Collisions

Abstract

  This document provides context and a report on the workshop on "Root
  Causes and Mitigation of Name Collisions", which took place in
  London, United Kingdom, from March 8 to 10, 2014.  The main goal of
  the workshop was to foster a discussion on the causes and potential
  mitigations of domain name collisions.  This report provides a small
  amount of background and context; then, it provides a summary of the
  workshop's discussions.

Status of This Memo

  This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
  published for informational purposes.

  This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other
  RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at
  its discretion and makes no statement about its value for
  implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by
  the RFC Editor are not a candidate for any level of Internet
  Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8023.














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Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2016 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
  document authors.  All rights reserved.

  This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
  Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
  (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
  publication of this document.  Please review these documents
  carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
  to this document.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Background and Context ..........................................4
     2.1. Brief Update ...............................................6
  3. Workshop Structure ..............................................7
     3.1. Research Findings ..........................................8
     3.2. System Analysis ............................................9
     3.3. Frameworks: Modeling, Analysis, and  Mitigation ............9
     3.4. Conclusions and Next Steps ................................11
  4. Security Considerations ........................................11
  5. Informative References .........................................12
  Appendix A. Program Committee .....................................16
  Appendix B. Workshop Material .....................................16
  Appendix C. Workshop Participants .................................17
  Acknowledgments ...................................................17
  Authors' Addresses ................................................17

1.  Introduction

  It has been well known within the Internet research and engineering
  community that many installed systems in the Internet query the
  domain name system (DNS) root for names under a wide range of top-
  level domains (TLDs).  Many of these TLDs are not delegated, which
  results in a response indicating that the name queried does not exist
  (commonly called an NXDOMAIN response [RFC7719]).  In the Internet
  Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) community, it was
  observed as early as November 2010 by the Security and Stability
  Advisory Committee (SSAC) report [SAC045] that the addition of new
  TLDs in the DNS root could result in so-called name collisions for
  names used in environments other than the global Internet.  Some
  installed systems, following established (albeit not vetted)
  operational practices, generate queries to the global DNS with name
  suffixes that, under seemingly reasonable assumptions at the time the
  systems were designed or configured, were not expected to be
  delegated as TLDs.  Many of these installed systems depend explicitly



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  or implicitly on the indication from the global DNS that the domain
  name suffix does not exist.  After a new TLD is delegated, the global
  DNS may give a different response to the query involving the TLD than
  it did prior to the TLD's delegation.

  A name collision occurs when an attempt to resolve a name used in a
  private namespace results in a query to the public DNS, and the
  response indicates that the name is in the global DNS [NCRI].  In
  other words, the overlap of public and private namespaces may result
  in potential unintended (and, therefore, potentially harmful)
  resolution results.  The impact of the global change on installed
  systems will be varied; risks to installed systems introduced by name
  collisions may arise due to varied causes.

  In a globally distributed system, such as the Internet, it is
  difficult, yet critical, to agree on policies for demarking
  boundaries of ownership and autonomy.  Name space governance is
  critical to ensure predictable use of names in the global DNS.

  In order to help ensure this uniqueness and interoperability, ICANN,
  through its coordination of the IANA functions, is responsible for
  administration of certain responsibilities associated with Internet
  DNS root zone management, such as generic and country code Top-Level
  Domains (gTLDs and ccTLDs).  Prior to ICANN's creation in 1998, seven
  generic TLDs were defined in the early development of the Internet
  [RFC1591].  Since the formation of ICANN, the delegations of generic,
  internationalized and country code TLDs have been administered and
  delegated by ICANN.  During these delegations, it quickly became
  apparent within the IETF community that there was a need to reserve
  name spaces that can be used for creating limited sets of internal
  names without fear of conflicts with current or future TLD name
  spaces in the global DNS [RFC2606].

  While the reserved TLDs [RFC2606] aimed to enable operators to use
  them only as a small set of reserved names internally, with limited
  uses, educational awareness and operational best practices did not
  achieve the goal of reserving special-use domain names [RFC6761];
  other suffixes, not reserved though at the time not in conflict, were
  often employed instead.  Faulty assumptions, or encouragement in some
  cases by vendor documentation, of "we only use this name internally
  and there is no possibility of leakage to the global DNS" were made
  by numerous operators or administrators.  Numerous reports and
  findings have clearly disproved these faulty assumptions by showing
  substantial "DNS leakage" into the global DNS through mechanisms such
  as search lists.

  In 2012, ICANN created a new gTLD program to add a potentially
  unlimited number of new gTLDs to the root zone as a mechanism to



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  enhance competition, innovation, and consumer choice.  With the
  potential of many new gTLDs becoming delegated in the global DNS,
  operators or administrators who elected to use a non-delegated name
  space internally may face potential "name collision" problems.

  This document is primarily a report on the March 2014 workshop that
  set out to examine the causes and mitigation of such name collisions
  and their associated risks.  It is a companion to the Workshop and
  Prize on Root Causes and Mitigation of Name Collisions proceedings
  [WPNC], and it also provides some additional background and context.

2.  Background and Context

  When the workshop was convened, the context and status of the work
  around name collisions could be described as follows.

  Since early 2008, there had been numerous lengthy discussions within
  the ICANN community about the ability of the DNS root to scale to
  accommodate new gTLDs and the impact of making those changes on the
  DNS ecosystem.  In March 2008, the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
  observed that the introduction of suffixes in use in a number of
  environments could lead to instability [IAB2008].  In December 2010,
  the Security and Stability Advisory Committee (SSAC) issued their
  report on root scaling in which the committee formalized several
  recommendations based on "actual measurement, monitoring, and data-
  sharing capabilities of root zone performance" to help determine the
  feasibility of root scaling [SAC046].  Separately, the Root Server
  System Advisory Committee [RSSAC] agreed in late 2010 on the need to
  establish standard metrics to be collected and reported by all
  operators.  This effort would provide the community with a baseline
  measure of the entire root server system's performance.  With such an
  established baseline, any possible negative effect from additional
  TLDs within the root could potentially be identified.  In late 2012,
  the ICANN Board affirmed the need to work with the root server
  operators via RSSAC to complete the documentation of the interactions
  between ICANN and the root server operators with respect to root zone
  scaling [IR2012].

  In March 2013, SSAC published an advisory titled "SSAC Advisory on
  Internal Name Certificates," which identified a Certificate Authority
  (CA) practice that, if widely exploited, "could pose a significant
  risk to the privacy and integrity of secure Internet communications"
  [SAC057].  The ICANN Board acknowledged the issues identified in the
  advisory report on internal name certificates [SAC057] as part of a
  more general category of issues.  These issues included installed
  systems utilizing a namespace in a private network that includes a
  non-delegated TLD that is later delegated into the root.  In May
  2013, the ICANN Board commissioned a study on the use within private



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  name spaces of TLDs that are not currently delegated at the root
  level of the global DNS [ISTUDY].  This study was focused on
  potential name collision events between applied-for new gTLDs and
  non-delegated TLDs potentially used in private namespaces.  The study
  also examined the potential possibility of name collisions arising
  from the use of digital certificates referenced in the SSAC report on
  internal name certificates [SAC057].

  Between the RSSAC's and SSAC's advisory statements ([RSSAC] [SAC046])
  and the ICANN commissioning of a study in May 2013, there was
  significant progress on establishing formalized, coordinated
  monitoring and measurement of the root.  RSSAC approached its
  finalization of the specific metrics that each root operator will
  collect and initiated discussions about where the operators will send
  their data for analysis once collected.  To properly gauge the risks
  of new gTLD delegations to the root, an established baseline of
  normal performance of the system would be required to start
  sufficiently ahead of the new delegations.  The execution of these
  RSSAC and SSAC recommendations was timed poorly with the commissioned
  study, resulting in a limited pool of data repositories from which
  any baseline and risk measurements could be established.

  It is common practice for each root operator to monitor its own root
  server, and some operators report the status and performance of their
  services publicly.  As of ICANN's study commissioned in May 2013
  [ISTUDY], there was no mechanism in place to allow a detailed view of
  the entire root system, short of the annual "Day in the Life"
  ([DITL]) data repository, which contains root DNS data over a short
  coordinated time period from a varying subset of root operators and
  was intended to be used for research purposes, not to provide overall
  monitoring and an operational view of system health.  Due to the lack
  of a more comprehensive and desirable data repository for baseline
  and collision analysis DITL has become the de facto referential
  dataset for root traffic analysis.

  The commissioned study, conducted by the Interisle Consulting Group,
  was published in August of 2013.  Their report "Name Collisions in
  the DNS" [INTERISLE], based on [DITL] measurements, addressed name
  collisions in the DNS and also recommended options to mitigate the
  various name collision risks.  The study identified categories of
  strings according to the risk they represent: low risk (80 percent of
  applied-for strings), uncalculated risk (20 percent of applied-for
  strings), and high risk (2 applied-for strings).

  At the same time as the [INTERISLE] study, ICANN published a
  proposal, titled "New gTLD Collision Occurrence Management Plan"
  [NGCOMP], to manage the risk of name collisions within the applied-
  for gTLDs.  Based on measurements, ICANN deemed two strings, .home



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  and .corp, to be high risk because of their widespread use within
  internal networks and would indefinitely delay their delegation
  [INTERISLE].  Those strings within the uncalculated-risk
  classification would be delayed 2 to 3 months in their application
  process while ICANN conducted more research into whether the string
  is of high- or low-risk classification.  Those in the low-risk
  classification would face a delay in activating domains until 120
  days after contracting with ICANN to allow for the change in
  certificate authority practices recommended in the SSAC report on
  internal name certificates [SAC057].

  Within the ICANN proposal [NGCOMP], an approach termed the
  "alternative path to delegation" was outlined, in which a registry
  operator could elect to proceed with delegation, provided it
  initially blocked all second-level domains (SLDs) that appeared in
  the certain DITL datasets pending the completion of the assessment.
  The majority of new gTLD applicants that were eligible elected this
  alternative path once otherwise approved for delegation.  The plan
  also outlined an outreach campaign to educate system administrators,
  software developers, and other engineers about the name collision
  issue and possible mitigation measures.

  As a further provision, the "New gTLD Collision Occurrence Management
  Plan" called for a follow-up study that would develop a "Name
  Collision Occurrence Management Framework" [NCOMF].  In February
  2014, the document, "Mitigating the Risk of DNS Namespace Collisions:
  Phase One Report," was published by the ICANN-contracted group JAS
  Global Advisors [MRDNC].  The report provides a number of
  recommendations for addressing the name collision issue focusing on a
  technique termed "controlled interruption," in which a registry would
  temporarily resolve all SLDs (or all SLDs present in the block list)
  to a specific IP: 127.0.53.53.  The report also makes provisions to
  implement an emergency plan and strategy in case name collisions had
  a "clear danger to human life."

2.1.  Brief Update

  In the time frame after the workshop, a final version of the Phase
  One Report was released in June 2014 [MRDNC].

  In July 2014, after a community review phase, a final recommendation
  was issued by ICANN [NCOMFINAL]; this has been followed by the
  publication of management documents for the implementation of a
  controlled interrupt for new gTLD delegations [NOCA] [NCSLDCIV]
  [ADDNOCA].






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  Much of the framework called for in the Name Collision Occurrence
  Management Framework [NCOMF] was not released by the time of writing
  this document, and the Phase One Report [MRDNC] indicated that its
  publication was delayed due to a security vulnerability [JASBUG]
  identified during the course of the work.

  Broad community efforts to measure the impact of name collisions were
  not included in the final recommendation issued by ICANN [NCOMFINAL].
  At the time of this writing, RSSAC has just published its
  specification of common measurements to be collected by root
  operators, meeting one part of the needs for measurements of the root
  server system [RSSAC002].

3.  Workshop Structure

  The Workshop and Prize on Root Causes and Mitigation of Name
  Collisions [WPNC], sponsored by Verisign, took place March 8-10, 2014
  in London, United Kingdom.  The WPNC was open to the public, and it
  gathered subject-area specialists, researchers, and practitioners to
  discuss and present their views, concerns, and ideas surrounding the
  name collision issue.  Proceedings are published at the workshop's
  website [WPNC].

  The workshop focused on studies of name collision risks and
  mitigations with the expectation to advance the global community's
  insight into operational uses of name suffixes that can result in
  name collisions and to gain a stronger understanding of the potential
  risks for the users of the installed systems.  Additional emphasis
  and attention was given to discussions that might advance the state
  of knowledge about the architecture and impacts of DNS namespaces
  with multiple scopes or resolution contexts and the utilization of
  new methods of monitoring and understanding the needs and methods for
  mitigating emerging Internet risks around name collisions.  A
  technical program committee, whose members spanned a variety of
  organizations and universities, was assembled.  The committee issued
  a call for papers and evaluated all submissions to ensure the highest
  level of quality.

  A synthesis of the accepted papers and conference proceedings is
  captured in the subsections below.  Another informal synopsis of the
  workshop combined with individual statements and observations is
  available online [COMMENTARY].









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3.1.  Research Findings

  Many of the research papers focused on the analysis of DITL data to
  better understand various aspects of the root NXDOMAIN traffic
  ([TECHNIQUES], [RARDBITS], [BLOCKLISTS], [MODELING], and
  [SEARCHLISTS]).  Note: all workshop contributions are listed in
  Appendix B; full papers and slides are available at the website
  [WPNC].

  While the DITL data has become the de facto referential dataset for
  root traffic analysis, some presenters echoed concerns that the
  dataset may have become biased or polluted with "artificial" queries
  after the ICANN "Reveal Day," in which the list of applied-for gTLD
  strings was publicly disclosed.  No conclusive or empirical evidence
  of tampering was presented; however, concerns about the integrity and
  reliability of future DITL collections and analysis for purposes
  related to new gTLDs were echoed by some panelists [IESCPANEL].
  Furthermore, the statistical accuracy and completeness of DITL data
  -- used to draw inferential conclusions or more specifically create
  SLD block lists -- was examined.  The efficacy of blocking domains
  based on sampled DNS data, e.g., DITL, was investigated by comparing
  measurements of SLDs within DITL and that of a multi-month root
  NXDOMAIN collection at the A and J roots [BLOCKLISTS].  The findings
  provided insights into SLD-root affinities, SLD temporal query
  patterns and occurrence frequencies that demonstrated the
  ineffectiveness of block listing domains based on sampled DNS data
  such as [DITL].

  Measurements of queries specifying the recursion desired (RD) bit to
  the roots in DITL were quantified to identify the level and nature of
  naive DNS clients and to determine and assess potential impacts that
  could arise from the proposed SLD blocking technique to these naive
  clients [RARDBITS].  A substantial proportion of the root server
  request traffic contained queries with the RD bit specified.  Both in
  absolute and relative terms, requests specifying the RD bit for
  applied-for gTLDs were found to be significantly lower when compared
  to existing TLDs.  The root cause determination of what system or
  mechanism is responsible for generating the queries was inconclusive
  and only speculative explanations of faulty implementations of a DNS
  resolving server were hypothesized.  However, the analysis was also
  not able to identify instances of actual or potential harm resulting
  from these naive clients, suggesting if SLD blocking techniques were
  to be utilized, it is unlikely there would be any negative impact to
  these naive clients.







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3.2.  System Analysis

  Comparison of elements can often help us to understand a system as a
  whole.  A passive study of the DNS traffic in a provisioned domain
  such as "corp.com" may elucidate certain name collision parallels
  [CORPCOM].  Such measurements were presented as a proxy for the
  ".corp" potential new gTLD.  According to the study, significant DNS
  traffic volume was directed at a variety of third-level domains under
  "corp.com".  This prompted a series of questions surrounding how name
  collisions can be identified, as most end-users won't recognize that
  problems may be due to a name collision.  How will users know that
  the problem they are experiencing is a result of a new, colliding
  gTLD?  Will support groups be able to diagnose a name collision event
  from reported symptom(s)?  Will a collision-based security hole be
  detectable?

  These questions, upon which underpinnings rely on communication and
  educational awareness, may find recommendations or parallels from
  other system references during the workshop [JASFRAMEWORK] -- such as
  the postal and telephone system.  Most telephone and postal systems
  have evolved over time, requiring individuals to alter the way they
  address their parcels or place their calls.  Both systems implemented
  their changes in such a way that prior to the change, educational
  material is distributed and communicated and for a period of time and
  after the change, compliance of the previous standard is temporarily
  accepted.  While the telephone and postal system operate in a very
  different way than the DNS, these parallels of "advanced
  notification, education and communication, and a grace period" were
  insightful for how other similar systems transitioned.

3.3.  Frameworks: Modeling, Analysis, and  Mitigation

  Statements from several TLD operators during the conference
  reverberated a theme for the need of improved tooling, education, and
  communication surrounding name collisions.  The delegation of new
  gTLDs is an ongoing event, and there is a clear and immediate need
  for these operators to have visibility to monitor and measure the
  effects of these new gTLD delegations.  A lack of tools, shared data,
  communication, and education surrounding name collisions has
  handicapped operators in their ability to quantitatively measure and
  proactively provide any steps for mitigation of risks.  To this end,
  numerous techniques, frameworks, and models that focused on the
  concepts of analyzing, detecting, and measuring various name
  collision risk factors were presented and reviewed with the hope of
  understanding these underlying concerns and issues ([TECHNIQUES]
  [MODELING] [SEARCHLISTS] [DNSENDUSER] [ENTNETWORK]).





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  Data-driven analysis and mitigation require operators to be versed
  and skilled with data analysis techniques to better understand the
  contextual intent and ownership of DNS queries.  An overview of
  various DNS analysis techniques in which ways of decomposing names,
  measuring temporal distributions between queries, and detecting
  organizational/geographical affinities was presented [TECHNIQUES].
  More-specific techniques were also showcased, such as a systematic
  way of observing and characterizing the impact of search lists within
  root DNS traffic allowing operators to quantify the number of unique
  entities that may be reliant on a particular name space
  [SEARCHLISTS].  While not exhaustive, the techniques presented have
  been proven to elucidate patterns within root DNS traffic data and
  could serve as the potential building blocks of a DNS analysis
  framework.

  Most of the previously published work focused on name collisions has
  produced various quantitative analyses based on observations of
  Internet traffic and data, including DNS queries and web content, in
  which behavior and associated risks have been inferred.  An
  understanding of the inverse of the process by starting with a
  fundamental model of name resolution at the client was proposed as an
  alternative means to define risk [MODELING].  This model
  deconstructed the process of name resolution at the resolver library
  of a client system and formalized a model from which derived metrics
  could be used to define and quantify associated risks.  While the
  model presented is only a piece of the greater name collision puzzle,
  it provides potentially new insights into what may otherwise be
  considered a missing piece.

  Just as important as understanding the root causes of name
  collisions, providing effective mitigation strategies is a critical
  piece of the name collision puzzle.  Mitigation can be achieved from
  both higher levels, such as ICANN, as well as the enterprise level.
  Proposed strategies for mitigating name collisions at both of these
  levels were presented.  While the technical details for each proposed
  strategy varies, underlying dependencies in both strategies require
  operators to monitor and educate/train their users.














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3.4.  Conclusions and Next Steps

  In their concluding statement [NEXTSTEPS], the workshop committee
  stated:

     It occurs to the program committee that the analysis of the
     interactions between the different uses of domain names within
     local or global context is almost a nonexistent topic of research.
     This may have to do with the lack of accessible data, lack of
     theory of root causes, a lack of interest, or a bias in the
     participation of the workshop.  We think that this is evidence
     that this study of the global centrally important technical system
     needs to be ramped up.

  Follow-on commentary [NEXTSTEPS] from the attendees reaffirmed this
  opinion with recurring messages of a need to understand the root
  causes of name collision and the need to overcome shortcomings within
  our shared data collection, monitoring, and analysis of the DNS.

  Many name collision unknowns still exist.  What are the root causes
  of these queries?  What is going on within a recursive name server?
  What vulnerabilities or subtle attack vectors do these new gTLD
  delegations enable?  The limited datasets available to researchers
  and operators are not sufficient to draw baseline measurements for
  these questions, forcing the community to make inferences and rank
  guesses as to what is going on within the DNS.  Using these
  suboptimal data repositories to create solutions such as block lists
  is only dealing with the symptoms of the problem and not addressing
  the root cause.  To properly answer these questions, the community
  needs to address the issue of a shortage of funding and data
  collection/analysis.  Communication and educational outreach programs
  need to be improved in order raise the awareness of impacted parties
  and broaden participation and sharing.

4.  Security Considerations

  Workshop participants discussed security aspects related to root
  cause analysis and mitigation techniques of potential name collision
  events.  As noted in several papers and presentations, security
  concerns may both arise and be addressed with name collision
  mitigation techniques.  Follow-on measurement-based research is
  important to security considerations for name collisions.









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5.  Informative References

  [ADDNOCA]        ICANN, "Addendum To Name Collision Occurrence
                   Assessment", November 2014,
                   <http://newgtlds.icann.org/sites/default/files/
                   agreements/name-collision-assessment-
                   addendum-14nov14-en.htm>.

  [BLOCKLISTS]     Thomas, M., Labrou, Y., and A. Simpson, "The
                   Effectiveness of Block Lists in Preventing
                   Collisions", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [COMMENTARY]     Kaliski, B., "Proceedings of Name Collisions
                   Workshop Available", March 2014,
                   <http://www.circleid.com/posts/20140326_proceedings_
                   of_name_collisions_workshop_available/>.

  [CORPCOM]        Strutt, C., "Looking at corp.com as a proxy for
                   .corp", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [DITL]           Center for Applied Internet Data Analysis, "A Day in
                   the Life of the Internet (DITL)", July 2011,
                   <http://www.caida.org/projects/ditl/>.

  [DNS-OARC]       Mitchell, K., "DNS-OARC", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [DNSENDUSER]     Huston, G., "Measuring DNS Behaviors from the End
                   User Perspective", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [ENTNETWORK]     Hoffman, P., "Name Collision Mitigation for
                   Enterprise Networks", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [IAB2008]        IAB, "The IAB's response to ICANN's solicitation on
                   DNS stability", March 2008,
                   <https://www.iab.org/documents/correspondence-
                   reports-documents/docs2008/2008-03-07-icann-new-
                   gtlds/>.

  [IESCPANEL]      Woolf, S., Koch, P., Kolkman, O., Kumari, W., and J.
                   Levine, "Internet Engineering and Standards
                   Considerations", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.




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RFC 8023                Name Collisions Workshop           November 2016


  [INTERISLE]      ICANN, "Name Collision in the DNS", Version 1.5,
                   August 2013,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/about/staff/security/
                   ssr/name-collision-02aug13-en.pdf>.

  [IR2012]         ICANN, "Preliminary Report | Regular Meeting of the
                   ICANN Board", September 2012,
                   <http://www.icann.org/en/groups/
                   board/documents/prelim-report-13sep12-en.htm>.

  [ISTUDY]         ICANN, "Security Studies on the Use of Non-Delegated
                   TLDs, and Dotless Names", May 2013,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/news/announcements/
                   announcement-28may13-en.htm>.

  [JASBUG]         Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures, "Group Policy
                   Remote Code Execution Vulnerability", CVE-2015-0008,
                   February 2015, <http://www.cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/
                   cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2015-0008>.

  [JASFRAMEWORK]   Schmidt, J., "Name Collisions Management Framework",
                   March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [KEEPEYE]        Schneier, B., "Keeping an Eye on Name Collisions",
                   March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [MODELING]       Deccio, C. and D. Wessels, "What's in a Name
                   (Collision): Modeling and Quantifying Collision
                   Potential", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [MRDNC]          ICANN, "Mitigating the Risk of DNS Namespace
                   Collisions: A Study on Namespace Collisions in the
                   Global Internet DNS Namespace and a Framework for
                   Risk Mitigation", February 2014,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/about/staff/
                   security/ssr/name-collision-
                   mitigation-26feb14-en.pdf>.

  [NCOMF]          ICANN, "ICANN Selects Lead for Development of Name
                   Collision Occurrence Management Framework", November
                   2013, <http://www.icann.org/en/news/announcements/
                   announcement-2-11nov13-en.htm>.






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RFC 8023                Name Collisions Workshop           November 2016


  [NCOMFINAL]      ICANN, "Name Collision Occurrence Management
                   Framework", July 2014,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/
                   name-collision-framework-30jul14-en.pdf>.

  [NCRI]           ICANN, "Name Collision Resources & Information",
                   <http://www.icann.org/en/help/name-collision>.

  [NCSLDCIV]       ICANN, "Name Collision SLD Controlled Interruption
                   Variations", September 2014,
                   <http://newgtlds.icann.org/sites/default/files/
                   agreements/name-collision-sld-controlled-
                   interruption-12sep14-en.htm>.

  [NEXTSTEPS]      Kaliski, B., "Workshop Wrap-Up and Next Steps",
                   March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [NGCOMP]         ICANN, "New gTLD Collision Risk Mitigation", August
                   2013,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/about/staff/security/ssr/
                   new-gtld-collision-mitigation-05aug13-en.pdf>.

  [NOCA]           ICANN, "Name Collision Occurrence Assessment",
                   August 2014,
                   <http://newgtlds.icann.org/sites/default/files/
                   agreements/name-collision-
                   assessment-04aug14-en.htm>.

  [RARDBITS]       Reid, J., "Analysing the Use of the RA and RD bits
                   in Queries to Root Servers", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [RFC1591]        Postel, J., "Domain Name System Structure and
                   Delegation", RFC 1591, DOI 10.17487/RFC1591, March
                   1994, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1591>.

  [RFC2606]        Eastlake 3rd, D. and A. Panitz, "Reserved Top Level
                   DNS Names", BCP 32, RFC 2606, DOI 10.17487/RFC2606,
                   June 1999, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2606>.

  [RFC6761]        Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "Special-Use Domain
                   Names", RFC 6761, DOI 10.17487/RFC6761, February
                   2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6761>.







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RFC 8023                Name Collisions Workshop           November 2016


  [RFC7719]        Hoffman, P., Sullivan, A., and K. Fujiwara, "DNS
                   Terminology", RFC 7719, DOI 10.17487/RFC7719,
                   December 2015,
                   <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7719>.

  [RSSAC]          Murai, J., "RSSAC response to the root scaling
                   report", November 2010,
                   <http://www.icann.org/en/news/
                   correspondence/murai-to-board-25nov10-en.pdf>.

  [RSSAC002]       ICANN Root Server System Advisory Committee,
                   "Advisory on Measurements of the Root Server
                   System", November 2014,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/
                   rssac-002-measurements-root-20nov14-en.pdf>.

  [SAC045]         ICANN Security and Stability Advisory Committee,
                   "Invalid Top Level Domain Queries at the Root Level
                   of the Domain Name System", SAC 045, November 2010,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/groups/ssac/documents/
                   sac-045-en.pdf>.

  [SAC046]         ICANN Security and Stability Advisory Committee,
                   "Report of the Security and Stability Advisory
                   Committee on Root Scaling", SAC 046, December 2010,
                   <https://www.icann.org/en/groups/ssac/documents/
                   sac-046-en.pdf>.

  [SAC057]         ICANN Security and Stability Advisory Committee,
                   "SSAC Advisory on Internal Name Certificates",
                   SAC057, March 2013,
                   <http://www.icann.org/en/groups/ssac/documents/
                   sac-057-en.pdf>.

  [SEARCHLISTS]    Simpson, A., "Detecting Search Lists in
                   Authoritative DNS", March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [TECHNIQUES]     Thomas, M. and A. Simpson, "Analysis Techniques for
                   Determining Cause and Ownership of DNS Queries",
                   March 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>.

  [WPNC]           Verisign, "Workshop and Prize on Root Causes and
                   Mitigation of Name Collisions (WPNC)", June 2014,
                   <http://namecollisions.net/>.





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Appendix A.  Program Committee

  This workshop program committee consisted of Geoff Huston, Burt
  Kaliski, Olaf Kolkman, John Levine, Allison Mankin, Lixia Zhang,
  Anne-Marie Eklund Loewinder, and Andrew Sullivan.

Appendix B.  Workshop Material

  Main Workshop Page: <http://namecollisions.net/>

  Name Collision Invited and Submitted Papers, Panels, and Videos:
  <http://namecollisions.net/program/index.html>

  The peer-reviewed papers were:

  o  "Analysis Techniques for Determining Cause and Ownership of DNS
     Queries" [TECHNIQUES],

  o  "Analysing the Use of the RA and RD bits in Queries to Root
     Servers" [RARDBITS],

  o  "The Effectiveness of Block Lists in Preventing Collisions"
     [BLOCKLISTS],

  o  "What's in a Name (Collision): Modeling and Quantifying Collision
     Potential" [MODELING], and

  o  "Detecting Search Lists in Authoritative DNS" [SEARCHLISTS].

  The invited talks were:

  o  "Keeping an Eye on Name Collisions" [KEEPEYE],

  o  "Looking at corp.com as a proxy for .corp" [CORPCOM],

  o  "Measuring DNS Behaviors from the End User Perspective"
     [DNSENDUSER],

  o  "DNS-OARC" [DNS-OARC], and

  o  "Name Collision Mitigation for Enterprise Networks" [ENTNETWORK].

  The panels and discussions were:

  o  "Internet Engineering and Standards Considerations" [IESCPANEL],

  o  "Name Collisions Management Framework" [JASFRAMEWORK], and




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  o  "Workshop Wrap-Up and Next Steps" [NEXTSTEPS].

Appendix C.  Workshop Participants

  A list of workshop participants is provided at [WPNC].

Acknowledgments

  We would like to thank both the program committee (Appendix A) and
  the workshop participants (Appendix C), with equal appreciation to
  those who spoke formally and those who joined in the lively
  discussions.

  Additionally, we would like to thank the following people for their
  review comments: Burt Kaliski, Olaf Kolkman, Ed Lewis, Nevil
  Brownlee, Tim Wicinski, and Danny McPherson.

Authors' Addresses

  Matthew Thomas
  Email: [email protected]

  Allison Mankin
  Salesforce
  Email: [email protected]

  Lixia Zhang
  UCLA
  Email: [email protected]






















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