The Internet Center for Assigned Names and Numbers, said Thursday that it had hired Jeff Moss, founder of the DEFCON and Conference Black Hat to direct security efforts.
Moss, who claims a CV of 20 years as a hacker using the name of dark tangent, will be responsible for helping secure system the Internet DNS (Domain Name), the foundations of the Internet.
"I can find no one with a better understanding of security threats to Internet users and the best way to defend against them that Jeff Moss," said Rod Beckstrom, President and CEO, in a statement of ICANN. "He has knowledge Insider thorough can come from fighting in the trenches of war underway against threats".
MOSS is a hacker self-proclaimed for more than 20 years. Before working with Black Hat and DEF CON, he was a Director at Secure Computing Corporation, where he created the Department of professional services in Asia, Australia and the United States, according to his biography of ICANN. He has also worked in the division of safety of the system information of Ernst & Young, LLP.
"I look forward to putting my skills to ICANN," says Moss, in a statement. "His role in the coordination of the Internet global addressing system means that it is positioned to become the leader in identifying and dealing with online threats for the system of domain names that may affect two billion global Internet users."
ICANN has moved into the spotlight recently with the approval of the.Part of top level domain XXX of the effort to introduce top-level-domains generics with possible names like .fish or .tree, to expand the scope of the Internet. In 2009, the ICANN approved domain name that uses non-Latin scripts.
At the end of March, a layer of security DNSSEC has been added to the .com zone, administered by Verisign. DNSSEC works of digital signing of documents search DNS public key cryptography. The correct DNSKEY record is authenticated via a chain of trust, starting with a set of public key for the root DNS zone.
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