How does DNS management work?

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  • Badmaash
    Confirmed User
    • Jan 2007
    • 2695

    #1

    How does DNS management work?

    High!

    I am going to enter a certain sector and there is just one big player in the niche. Every new player that has tried to enter it appear they have got people to attack the other sites and take them down.

    So I came across DNS management http://dyn.com/dns/ but not sure how it works and how it can save your site from attacks.

    Do I still host my website on my existing server and just use there DNS and point them to my server?

    Thanks

    B
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  • KRosh
    So Fucking Outlawed
    • Nov 2001
    • 5114

    #2
    Originally posted by Badmaash
    High!

    I am going to enter a certain sector and there is just one big player in the niche. Every new player that has tried to enter it appear they have got people to attack the other sites and take them down.

    So I came across DNS management http://dyn.com/dns/ but not sure how it works and how it can save your site from attacks.

    Do I still host my website on my existing server and just use there DNS and point them to my server?

    Thanks

    B
    You still manage your server - This is just the Name Server. You will be able to move hosting, add subdomains, make NS changes on the fly and in minutes, rather than the typical 24-72 hour propagation.
    It can increase the speed of your site, and If one nameserver goes offline or an area of the internet temporarily fail, there will be several other name servers in other geographical locations to fill the gap and provide nameservices for your domain.
    ICQ 115433750

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    • Badmaash
      Confirmed User
      • Jan 2007
      • 2695

      #3
      Originally posted by KRosh
      You still manage your server - This is just the Name Server. You will be able to move hosting, add subdomains, make NS changes on the fly and in minutes, rather than the typical 24-72 hour propagation.
      It can increase the speed of your site, and If one nameserver goes offline or an area of the internet temporarily fail, there will be several other name servers in other geographical locations to fill the gap and provide nameservices for your domain.
      So technically this service coupled with two servers (one main and one mirror) should do the trick

      Thanks

      B
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      Comment

      • bigluv
        Confirmed User
        • Jul 2008
        • 850

        #4
        I'm not educated on what they in particular have going on, but DNS isn't going to save you from a big DDOS if its the only thing you are pinning your hopes on?

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        • KRosh
          So Fucking Outlawed
          • Nov 2001
          • 5114

          #5
          Originally posted by bigluv
          I'm not educated on what they in particular have going on, but DNS isn't going to save you from a big DDOS if its the only thing you are pinning your hopes on?
          Dyn does a great job protecting against DDoS

          It is another layer of protection and higher uptime, because manged DNS uses Anycast DNS resolution. This assures there is always a server available to respond to DNS queries.

          ICQ 115433750

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          • KRosh
            So Fucking Outlawed
            • Nov 2001
            • 5114

            #6
            Open DNS resolvers are recursive DNS servers that are configured to accept queries from any computers on the Internet. These act as relays between users and authoritative DNS servers; they receive queries for ANY domain name, find the authoritative name server responsible for it and relay the information received from that server back to the user.

            Authoritative name servers, such as Dyn, will only respond to queries concerning the domain names they serve.

            The attackers would have to do a lot of homework and know exactly what domains are hosted by Dyn to launch their attack, making it much harder...of course not impossible.
            ICQ 115433750

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            • Badmaash
              Confirmed User
              • Jan 2007
              • 2695

              #7
              Originally posted by KRosh
              Open DNS resolvers are recursive DNS servers that are configured to accept queries from any computers on the Internet. These act as relays between users and authoritative DNS servers; they receive queries for ANY domain name, find the authoritative name server responsible for it and relay the information received from that server back to the user.

              Authoritative name servers, such as Dyn, will only respond to queries concerning the domain names they serve.

              The attackers would have to do a lot of homework and know exactly what domains are hosted by Dyn to launch their attack, making it much harder...of course not impossible.
              Interesting shit.............

              Do you use DNS management?
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