What's your replacement if DNSSEC is moribund?
It seems to me like it actually solves a problem, what is the solution to "I want/need to be able to trust the DNS answer" without DNSSEC?
What's your replacement if DNSSEC is moribund?
It seems to me like it actually solves a problem, what is the solution to "I want/need to be able to trust the DNS answer" without DNSSEC?
Largely, DNS integrity has been addressed by making it harder to spoof dns responses without visibility.
Resolvers have put in the effort to use most of the range of source ports and all of the range of request ids, as well as mixed caps, so predicting queries is difficult and blind spoofing requires an unreasonable number of packets.
Additionally, commercial DNS services tend to be well connected anycast. This means most queries can be served with a very low round trip time; reducing the spoofing window. Additionally, there's less opportunity to observe requests as they traverse fewer networks and less distance.
Generally, traffic has moved to certificate authenticated protocols. CAs are required to verify domain control from multiple locations, so an attacker asserting domain control would need to do so for the victim as well as multiple other locations in order to get a certificate issued.
Further; if we assume you plan to assert domain control by taking over or MITMing the IP of a DNS server, it seems likely you could do the same for the IP of an application server. DNSSEC doesn't help very much in that case. (DNSSEC with DANE could help in that case, but to a first approximation, nothing supports that, and there doesn't appear to be any movement towards it)
Port randomization helps against blind spoofing, but once an attacker is on-path or owns a resolver, it stops mattering.
If an attacker owns a resolver DNSSEC stops mattering too; from the resolver to the stub-resolver, the protocol collapses down to a single "yes we did DNSSEC" bit in the header.
The bigger thing here is DoH, which has very real penetration, and works for zones that don't do anything to opt-in. That's what a good design looks like: it just works without uninvolved people having to do extra stuff.
I think DNSSEC supporters, what few of them are left, are really deep into cope about what transport security is doing to the the rationale for DNSSEC deployment. There's nothing about DoH that makes it complicated to speak it to an authority server. The only reason I can see that we're not going to get that is that multi-perspective kills the value proposition of even doing that much.
> There's nothing about DoH that makes it complicated to speak it to an authority server.
There’s a problem with HTTPS, though. HTTPS uses URLs that use WebPKI to tie the URL to the certificate validation algorithm. Which means you need WebPKI certificates, which needs DNS. Chicken, meet egg.
Maybe there could be a new URL scheme that doesn’t need WebPKI. It could be spelled like:
or maybe something slightly crazy and even somewhat backwards compatible if the CA/browser people wouldn’t blow a fuse: explicit_key.net would be some appropriate reserved domain, and some neutral party (ICANN?) could actually register it, expose the appropriate A records and, using a trusted and name-constrained intermediate CA, issue actual certificates that allow existing browsers to validate the key material in the domain name.I think stuff like this is more than promising; I think it's likely to happen relatively soon.
Which is a problem with the OS and browser, not with DNSSEC.
Eric Rescorla's post, linked upthread, goes into detail about why "OS's and browsers" can't easily solve this problem without breaking the Internet for materially large fractions of their users. In practice, browsers that care about DNS security just use DoH.
It seems pretty clear to me that the industry, and particularly the slice of the industry that operates large, important sites and staffs big security teams, doesn't believe this is a meaningful problem at all.
I agree with them.
Would this article not be evidence the part of the industry that makes up the CA/B Forum (i.e. CAs and Browsers) disagree?
Yeah but CAs want to sell you certificates, and browsers compete on their support for those certificates.
Huh? They really don't. It's actually kind of unfortunate that browsers don't have uniform policies about what certificates they accept, but for obvious reasons each browser wants to make their own decision.
The fact that it's 2026 and the CAs are only now getting around to requiring any CA to take DNSSEC, which has in its current form been operational for well over a decade, makes you take DNSSEC more seriously?
Why dodge the question? Clearly they care today, and I live in today.
If we're doing to defer to industry, does only the opinion of website operators matter, or do browsers and CAs matter too? Browsers and CAs tend to be pretty important and staff big security teams too.
Are they requiring DNSSEC in order to acquire the certificate? That would be a better indicator to me that it's not security theater=security
Barely 5% of the internet have DNSSEC signed zones and a big chunk of that are handled by CDN's that do the signing automagically for the domain owner as they also host SOA DNS. Mandating DNSSEC would require years of planning and warning those that have not yet set it up and in my opinion DNSSEC tooling should become a better first class citizen in all of the authoritative DNS daemons. as in there should be so many levels of error handling and validation that it would be next to impossible for anyone to break their zones.
So do we wait for all the stragglers? Wait for the top 500 or top 2500 to make it mandatory? Who takes financial responsibility for those that fell through the cracks?
No CA requires DNSSEC. Obviously they can't: almost nothing is signed. The only change "today" is that technically CAs are now required to honor DNSSEC, where they weren't before.
I think the fact they don't require it shows it's moribund. If cert providers (or google with their big stick of chrome) specified it is required to have DNSSEC to get a certificate, everyone would jump in line and set it up because there'd be no other choice.
I agree that not checking it all is an even worse signal. I'm just saying the fact that this is officially enforced only in 2026 is itself a bad signal. At any rate, the CAs you'd have worked with were enforcing DNSSEC this whole time.
Which is really unfortunate, since it's pretty easy to do.
I agree that it's relatively easy for CAs to validate DNSSEC. I think the fact that they weren't technically required to, despite the sole remaining use case for DNSSEC being to protect against misissuance, is a pretty strong indicator of how cooked DNSSEC is.
Big sites don't have the same concerns as individual end users, in this case specifically about centralized servers surveilling DNS queries.
DNSSEC zone signing lets one resolve records without having to directly go through trusted (ie centralizing) nameservers. (If you run your own recursive resolver this just changes the set of trusted servers to the zones' servers).
I've made this argument in the context of your poo-pooing DNSSEC before, and I don't expect you to be receptive to it this time. Rather I just really wish I could get around to writing code to demonstrate what I mean.
It will change as soon as one of them gets meaningfully DNS hijacked.
Zones get meaningfully hijacked all the time. It just doesn't happen through cache poisoning; it happens through phished registrar accounts.