Man’s best friend: why DNS is the secret cybersecurity superpet

Man’s best friend: why DNS is the secret cybersecurity superpet

The internet was a very different place in the 1980s. Connecting a machine to what was then the ARPAnet – a government-funded research network – wasn’t something you could do on a whim. You had to pick up the phone, call someone at the Stanford Research Institute, and ask nicely. That changed with the invention of the Domain Name System (DNS).

Introduced by Paul Mockapetris in the latter half of the decade, DNS automatically translated human-friendly domain names like “example.com” into machine-readable IP addresses, allowing users to access websites without needing to remember numerical strings. Before DNS, this process relied on a single, centralized text file that had to be manually updated and distributed, which obviously limited the network’s size and scope.

Gary Cox

Director of Technology for Western Europe, Infoblox.

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