> Finally, the Ceremony Administrator can sign the KSR with the private key-signing key. He enters “Y” on a command prompt, and the dramatic portion of the ceremony is complete.
Nerds, man. I love it.
Title should contain a "(2015)" tag though, as this blog post was written about the 22nd ceremony:
I will never get tired (I guess until, in some speculative future, it stops being true) that these root keys could land on Pastebin and nobody would need to be paged --- I think it is still literally the case that nobody's operational security depends on DNSSEC.
Title should contain a "(2015)" tag though, as this blog post was written about the 22nd ceremony:
https://www.iana.org/dnssec/ceremonies/22
Last ceremony, the 56th, was held on February 12[1]; next is on April 24[2].
[1] https://www.iana.org/dnssec/ceremonies/56
[2] https://www.iana.org/dnssec/ceremonies/57
I will never get tired (I guess until, in some speculative future, it stops being true) that these root keys could land on Pastebin and nobody would need to be paged --- I think it is still literally the case that nobody's operational security depends on DNSSEC.
https://sockpuppet.org/blog/2016/10/27/14-dns-nerds-dont-con...