Archive for category DNSSEC Deployment Maps
Updated DNSSEC Deployment Maps Available on Deploy360
Posted by Dan York in DNSSEC Deployment Maps on January 27, 2016
Today I’ve updated the page showing DNSSEC Deployment Maps over on the Deploy360 site. The maps are generated each Monday and sent to a mailing list (to which you can subscribe) and the latest versions are always available in the mailing list archives. However, from time to time I update the page to show the latest maps so that people can easily find them.
By the way, the latest ccTLD to sign with DNSSEC was Azerbaijan’s .AZ domain!
DNSSEC Deployment Maps Updated Today (2 Sep 2014) With Latest New GTLDs
Posted by Dan York in DNSSEC Deployment Maps on September 2, 2014
As part of our ongoing publishing of DNSSEC deployment maps showing visually the DNSSEC status of country-code top-level domains (ccTLDs), we also publish a comma-separated value (CSV) file that contains the DNSSEC status of all the generic top-level domains (gTLDs), including all the “new gTLDs” that have been published as part of ICANN’s program. We do not yet have any visual display of the generic TLDs, although that is something we would like to eventually include in the distribution. For the moment they are just listed in a CSV file – and primarily what we are listing is that they have a DS record in the root zone of DNS.
The latest maps and CSV files as of today, September 2, 2014, can now be found online. These maps and CSV files are published every Monday morning with whatever updates have been made to the database. If you would like to receive the maps and CSV files, please subscribe to the dnssec-maps mailing list. The list is “announce-only”, i.e. it is not a discussion list, and so you will only receive the weekly map updates and very occasional administrative updates. You can visit the list archives to see the type of messages sent to the list.
DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future
Posted by Mark Feldman in DNSSEC Deployment Maps on September 10, 2013
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.
DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future
Posted by Mark Feldman in DNSSEC Deployment Maps on July 30, 2013
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.
DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future
Posted by Mark Feldman in DNSSEC Deployment Maps on February 19, 2013
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.
DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future
Posted by Mark Feldman in DNSSEC Deployment Maps on February 1, 2013
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.
DNSSEC in ccTLDs, Past, Present, and Future
Posted by Mark Feldman in DNSSEC Deployment Maps on July 2, 2012
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.
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