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BIND 9 Refactoring
Read moreThe first release of BIND 9 was in September 2000. In the intervening 16 years, we have issued 225...
February 14, 20170 -
2017 Root Key Rollover – What Does it Mean for BIND Users?
Read moreUpdate September 28, 2017 – ICANN has decided to postpone the October 11th key rollover step. No new schedule...
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Release 9.11 adds provisioning options for DNS authoritative services
Read moreWe are proud to bring you another version of BIND, 9.11.0. We have added many new features, updated our...
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The Potential Operational Risks Associated with Untrusted Zone Transfers
Read moreAt the DNS Summer Day 2016 held in Tokyo on June 24th it was disclosed that an...
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BIND9 Adopts the MPL 2.0 License with BIND 9.11.0
Read moreISC published BIND under a very permissive open source license nearly two decades ago, and we have been maintaining it ever...
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ISC considering a change to the BIND9 license
Read moreISC published BIND under a very permissive open source license nearly two decades ago. Since then, it has become...
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The ISC Performance Lab
Read moreISC’s BIND DNS server software is renowned for its rich feature set and compliance with standards but not for...
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2015 ISC Open Source Accomplishments
Read moreWe are proud of another year of solid, responsible maintenance of our three core software products, BIND, ISC DHCP...
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H-Root will change its addresses on 1 December 2015. What does this mean for you?
Read morehttp://h.root-servers.org/renumber.html The Internet DNS root nameservers are the servers which are authoritative for “.”, the apex of the...
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What is a BIND Assertion Failure?
Read moreWith the recent spate of patch releases of BIND due to security issues, I thought that it was worth...
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Internet Systems Consortium > BIND
Last modified: August 3, 2017 at 4:54 pm