Amazon Web Services Launches DNS Service 146
wiredmikey writes "Amazon Web Services (AWS) today announced a highly available and scalable Domain Name System service designed to give developers and businesses a reliable and cost effective way to route end users to Internet applications. The service, 'Route 53,' effectively connects user requests to infrastructure running in AWS — such as an Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud instance, an Amazon Elastic Load Balancer, or an Amazon Simple Storage Service bucket — and can also be used to route users to infrastructure outside of AWS."
We see what you did there Amazon. (Score:5, Insightful)
That is all.
Re:We see what you did there Amazon. (Score:5, Insightful)
the question is, will it route to wikileaks when under government pressure? Oh right, it'll monetize every website you go to and block anyone the politicians don't like.
I'll pass on this, whenever.
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I really don't see anything wrong with Amazon's response - they got a complaint, checked on it, and it violated their terms of service. Remember that that wikileaks is hosting STOLEN US PROPERTY, and as much as it is fun to read about it, it was illegally obtained - if this were a pirated software site, we wouldn't blink twice if the DNS provider refused them service.
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really?
when was that ever proven in court? What was stolen? Those diplomatic cables were never "exclusive US ownership" - by definition, they are owned by the citizens of the united states, not the government - We pay for these diplos with tax money. Have you ever heard of prior restraint?
oh right, never proven to be illegal or stolen. good job making that leap there, fyi.
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Legally, Wikileaks' action is likely protected under the First Amendment. In 1971, the Supreme Court ruled (New York Times v. U.S) that the First Amendment barred the Nixon administration from keeping the New York Times and Washington Post from publishing illegally leaked information related to the Vietnam War. Two other cases (Landmark Communications v. Virginia and Bartnicki v. Vopper) support the view that it is not illegal to publish leaked information, even if the original leaking of that information w
Re:We see what you did there Amazon. (Score:5, Insightful)
It hasn't been "deemed illegal by the US government". That requires a court decision, and the government attorneys haven't even filed charges yet. People are innocent until proven guilty, facts are not established until proven in court. There most certainly are plenty of disputes about whether the publications were legal, on several different bases. But even if it were an "open and shut case", that still requires that the case be opened and then shut, which it hasn't.
Without that due process, Amazon can decide for any reason, like some Senator whining about some bad press, that content or services must be shut down. Due process is important, as is protection from arbitrary denials of services that are paid for and expected to critically support a business operation.
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1: What I posted replies to the comment asserting that "the US government deemed Wikileaks' content illegal". Amazon's given reasons are totally irrelevant to the fact that the government has not "deemed" that, as I detailed.
2: Amazon's claims are also not believable. Specifically Amazon says Wikileaks has released 250,000 classified documents, though Wikileaks has released only about 270. There is little evidence that human rights orgs are the ones whose complaints Amazon is acting on. Those excuses are a
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Re:We see what you did there Amazon. (Score:4, Insightful)
But it sure is a golden marketing moment. I'm an AWS customer (we do huge enterprise hosting environments that integrate with AWS) and I'd had been impressed with them had they said "10GBps of DDOS traffic? Pfffft. Our anycasted infrastructure easily shrugs that off." Now, they look bad in both technical and political circles (at least to those who believe in freedom of speech for those not accused or convicted of a crime).
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as doc pointed out below - the government declare anything illegal, but until a judge finds that to be true, it ain't.
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Route 53 - sort of a combination of the famous Route 66 [wikipedia.org] and a 'leet version of S3. ...in case you didn't get it.
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Woosh :-)
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Re:We see what you did there Amazon. (Score:5, Funny)
Spamvertisement (Score:5, Insightful)
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The light bill doesn't pay itself.
Taco at least meters them in as opposed to flooding the front page. Unless a new iPod comes out or the like, then all bets are off.
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Given the recent news around Amazon and Wikileaks, I'd say this is more like a comment laxative.
Re:Spamvertisement (Score:4, Informative)
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They posted it to give us a chance for lulz.
I mean, really. Is ANYONE reading this going to think "what a great idea, I'll just sign my DNS up with Amazon"?
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I've been looking for a new DNS host. And it's funny, I actually clicked on this story thinking I'd get to read some informed comments about the pluses and minuses of Amazon's new service from people who would know.
Amazon "cloud" hosting services - popular with geeks, used by employed developers everywhere.
Slashdot - a place where informed geeks talk about technical matters.
See how I could easily have made that mistake?
But I forgot, sometimes on sla
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On the other hand, if a major tech vendor releases a new service that may be something newsworthy. No? Do we not consider it news when apple or google do something new? Should we? (Maybe I don't know the answer to that!)
I guess I clicked on the story kind of hoping to find out what slashdotters think about the new service. To find out if there is anything co
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No, obviously I do want to know what they sell. Especially when they try to sell it under a different name. All the better to not buy it with.
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Thanks for the update. We'll be waiting anxiously for further updates.
Sounds great for WikiLeaks (Score:3, Insightful)
Since EasyDNS couldn't handle them anymore. Oh wait, wasn't there a problem with Amazon to start with?
Imma jump right on this... (Score:5, Insightful)
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German: "what the vuck"?
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Since EasyDNS couldn't handle them anymore. Oh wait, wasn't there a problem with Amazon to start with?
Yeah, I thought that too. They announced this just after kicking Wikileaks out. It does give you an idea of how reliable that DNS service is.
Screw them.
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Things don't always cost more at other sites. For instance, a new Xbox game at Amazon is the same price as a new Xbox game at Newegg. I buy from Amazon out of familiarity and habit. It's my default. I kind of hope Amazon suffers because of their behavior over this. And certainly I would never, ever use EasyDNS after this. You'd have to be crazy to.
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Since EasyDNS couldn't handle them anymore. Oh wait, wasn't there a problem with Amazon to start with?
You got the company wrong! EasyDNS actually has volunteered to take on WikiLeaks as a customer. [easydns.org] It was *EveryDNS* that bowed to the US government and dropped WikiLeaks.
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EveryDNS.
really? (Score:4, Insightful)
"A reliable, cloud-based DNS service has been one of the most requested offerings by our customers" ... really?
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Well, comcast is going to be *all* over this one...
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Comcast needs to be all over something. Last night was just one of a series of troubles with dns they've had.
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yeah - I switched my mom from Comcast to google DNS (8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4) when she couldn't get through to support - I wasn't near a computer at the time and I remembered that one off the top of my head.
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Yeah, probably. If you're already running all their services, do you really want to manage BIND or equivalent by yourself? Linode offers DNS for their VM service, I'm sure others do too.
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I have to agree. I evaluated using AWS for some production systems and it's horrible (it felt like it was still in a beta test stage). I would have assumed that the most user requested feature would have been to offer up-to-date server images running on their EBS (non-ephemeral) storage or at least provide a supported method for migrating server images from the instance-based storage to the permanent storage.
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"A reliable, cloud-based DNS service has been one of the most requested offerings by our /former/ customers"
Fixed that for you.
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Google has caved to the government on several occasions. What are you smoking?
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Spinelessly caving in to secret threats from a fascist individual amounts to playing with your constitutional rights and deserves to be derided. People would not have been hard at all on Amazon if they were responding to a formal legal notice from government, based on a properly adjudicated case.
Whether there is or not a US company that can take on the US government is irrelevant to the result. Any company that does what Amazon did must be and will be hauled up by the people.
Arguments such as yours only ser
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My point is that many of you are being too hard on Amazon. You want to fight the real fight in this then fight the government, not the businesses. Businesses make decisions based on their bottom line (most of the time) so will "cave" as you say on what they perceive as a threat to it.
Beat up the government or those in it that make these kinds of threats and/or decisions. Simply put, yelling at the companies for doing what the government tell them to do will get you nowhere (or at least close enough to it
Hmmm.... (Score:4, Insightful)
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It's hard to say, but the latter probably can exert enough pressure that the US government wouldn't have to. Not that I have any idea which it is.
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Re:Hmmm.... (Score:4, Insightful)
I know it's not normal to read the article on Slashdot, but seriously? Amazon is offering DNS hosting. Think BIND, not OpenDNS or whatever.
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No, that's not what I meant. You and the GP are talking about distributed DNS that a client uses. For example, at home I use my ISP's DNS servers. This is what we want alternative DNS for, and I don't disagree with you. However, Amazon's service is for DNS nameservers. When I own a domain, I point the nameservers at ns1.example.com, ns2.example.com, which officially say that example.com points at 192.168.1.1. This is the service Amazon is hosting. You could do this at several places, but instead of hosting
Amen! (Score:3)
When they fought the one click patent war and bragged otherwise, started publishing stats on what their .com customers were buying, and laughed at my privacy complaint (I have my own .com domain), I dropped them and found that almost everything they have, I can get cheaper elsewhere.
They keep on pulling shenanigans like caving to the government over wikileaks, one excuse after another for being craven cowards and bullies, and I continue to wonder why people trust them.
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Amazon keeps selling a book that teaches you how to make love to a child but takes down wikileaks?
Yes I think they should ban the Qur'an too
Very funny, Amazon! ROFLMAO (Score:2)
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Uh... I'm sure Bezos is just terrified of losing your and a few other accounts.
And you're just twigging to the nature of large businesses? Ah. Before this you believed them when they said things like "Don't be evil."?
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Oh, I agree that doing it makes you feel better, and it's harmless. It's just not a very effective riposte.
On most tech related issues the large mass of people are not only going to do nothing but aren't even going to be cynical about it.
Unless it can be made to connect to them in a way they feel, why should they? Example: I can get all worked up over funding for some esoteric physics research that will have a good effect, but most people will have no idea about it. To expect them to pick up that torch is u
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I think you read too much into my initial post. I'm hardly pissed off. Or even annoyed by it. You'd have to work much harder for that. ;)
So, you can not patronize Amazon, and I can donate to the EFF, and I'll buy you a beer (or soda, or your preference) if we ever meet up.
Fair enough?
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Already donate to EFF. And, if you happen to ever be near Urbana, Illinois, yeah, I'd buy you one.
Otherwise, as Sylvester Q. Pussycat says, "It's the sediment that counts." :)
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It's a cheap way to inflict some small amount of financial loss and to assuage one's consciousness by not supporting the guilty. It's better than nothing, iow. What's your problem?
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I think Amazon would be happy about you closing an account with PayPal - one of their competitors.
This is more likely something aimed at the happy customers of amazon's cloud services - not places like wikileaks that could pose a serious legal risk for amazon to be hosting. Those happy customers will be happy to trust this DNS service. Sites like wikileaks probably won't trust ANY provider to begin with.
Unfortunately, their service has some bugs... (Score:3)
Yes i think i would use that ... (Score:2)
my apps, business, customers are far valuable to risk by using amazon's spineless (tm) services.
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so, all it depends would be the spine factor involved. amazon didnt have spine. facebook also got threatened, but they showed more spine than amazon. and they arent as rich yet.
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All about the bottom line. If Amazon had refused, Fox News, CNN, and all the other government-loving propaganda channels would smear them with so much shit that Amazon would start losing the Sarah Palin-loving "real American" costumer base (didn't her book make it to #1 on Amazon?) and even more than just that customers, since a high percentage of Americans think WikiLeaks is a criminal organisation and Assange should be assassinated without trial, because "We are the United States of America, and when we d
peh (Score:2)
Hey America, guess who's the new Soviet Union now?
in soviet union, you, me, actually any citizen had not only the right, but also the possibility to get elected and rise to high ranks in government through democratic process. you didnt need money to mount election campaigns.
in america, if you arent rich, you cant use your right to get elected.
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Either way works. They usually are pulling a train that loops around and connects to itself.
The circle of life is thus complete.
But (Score:2)
And will they refuse to list you if they don't like your content?
Route 53? Not good. (Score:2)
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I live in Chicago. In the burbs there is a Route 53. It's heavily congested and often under construction. Is this what Amazon is offering?
I live in Holland, Michigan. There's also a route 53 here. It's well known for the glory holes, where a guy can get an anonymous blowjob, right next door to the geek compound.
I hope the Amazon Route 53 is more like the Michigan one - that one sounds much more fun.
Maybe that's (Score:3)
DO NOT WANT (Score:5, Insightful)
Tagged: DONOTWANT
Could be worse: (Score:3)
Well, it probly was better than Comcast last night in the MidWest.
They promoted equality by failing to return ALL dns queries for several hours.
An actually useful link? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure it will be useful... (Score:5, Insightful)
...until they censor your website. Wikileaks is not the only one [wordorigins.org] with a problem.
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Amazon is the new middle man, replacing publishers with their ecommerce engine. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.
Reliable? Ask Wikileaks! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Reliable? Ask Wikileaks! (Score:4, Insightful)
Not sure why you'd single out Amazon for this. Wikileaks violated their ToS. Any provider will kick you off if you violate their ToS, Amazon just gets the flack because they actually had a high-profile customer that they dropped. It should be taken as a danger of relying on 'the cloud' (i.e. letting someone else control your important infrastructure), rather than specific evidence that Amazon is evil.
Remember boys and girls, putting stuff in the cloud means giving someone else control over the off switch.
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How dare they make a business decision. They should be forced to do what we want. This is a free country after all.
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And yet despite your smartass reply, Amazon--including S3, EC2 and their other hosting-related features--are making money hand over fist. Have you investigated the possibility that Slashdot is, you know, not a great indicator of mainstream opinion?
If I were going to host a website in the cloud that leaked classified government documents, I would not use Amazon. For just about any other purpose where cloud hosting was appropriate to begin with, I would continue to consider them in exactly the same way as
Nice TOS (Score:2)
Wikileaks violated their ToS
So? Don't give me the business at will crap.
Many picture print services have an anti-blasphemy clause in their ToS. Does that mean, they won't let me print pictures of a bearded guy wearing a turban? Probably not, because Lieberman won't threaten them over that. But it still shouldn't be in their ToS.
The proper way to handle things like Wikileaks would be a court order - expressing the will of the people, open to a legal counter-challenge, and a democratic discussion process.
Not some blacklists, a cor
Unless Joe Lieberman doesn't like you. (Score:2)
Because his phone call to Amazon will function as a de-facto "internet kill-switch", just as little Joe has always dreamed of having.
Awesome (Score:2)
Scalable, redundant and probably fast.
But is it Lieberman-proof?
Amazon Rolled Over on Wikileaks. A Pox on Amazon! (Score:2)
Julian Assange is the best friend Democracy has. All these so-called news organizations, with their bloated budgets, failed to unearth any of this stuff. To keep their precious "access" the modern TV newsreader does no investigation at all. Instead, we get celebrity news...
route 53 lacks some important features (Score:2, Informative)
They should've called it Route 66... (Score:2)
Wikileaks is a small example (Score:2)
Cloud computing has a major Achille's Heel: you surrender your infrastructure and data to another entity. I've got the same issue with the Google cloud on my Android phone.
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No more trusting amazon for web services. If they can't sustain the DOS (political), how can we trust? Lean from Wikileaks.
Ok, let's see what we can learn from Wikileaks. To me it sounds like we learned that if you violate the Terms of Use of an ISP, then you lose your website. But I think that you learned that Amazon is bad and some other ISP would have acted differently.
I'll make a deal with you - identify a single ISP within the USA that would be willing to host Wikileaks content at around the same price point as Amazon EC2 (i.e. less than $200/month) and I'll buy the webhosting and mirror the Wikileaks site. If you think
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I normally wouldn't take issue to this, however their wording and context makes it sound like people will be able to see updates within 60 seconds. While it may update on their end within 60 seconds, after your DNS Servers cache, operating system's cache and the browsers cache, you are looking at atleast an hour depending on what setup you have. Fix it Amazon.
What is wrong with what they wrote? Route 53 isn't designed for end users who don't understand all of the caching points of DNS entries -- if I swing my DNS entry to point to another server IP, based on what they wrote, I know that within 60 seconds I'll start to see clients hitting that new server. And I know that I'll still see lingering hits at the old IP even after 24 hours.
Amazon has no control over client side caching -- TTL is advisory, not mandatory.