AT-LARGE GATEWAY
At-Large Regional Policy Engagement Program (ARPEP)
At-Large Review Implementation Plan Development
Page History
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Comment participer a cette teleconference? French Conference ID = 1838
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Dial out Participants:
EN: Tijani Tijani Ben Jemaa, Olivier Olivier Crépin-Leblond, Naveen Lakshman , Naveen Lakshman, Afifa Abbas, Gordon Chillcott, Wafa Dahmani, Yrjö Lansipuro, Glenn McKnight, Isaac Maposa, Jason Wagner, John Laprise, Jordi Iparraguirre, Ricardo Holmquist
ES: Harold Arcos, Alberto Soto
FR: Fatimata Seye Sylla
Presenter:
Matt Larson, Vice President of Research for the CTO office at ICANN
Participants:
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Apologies:
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Alan Greenberg (tentative
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),
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Maureen Hilyard, Holly Raiche, Kaili Kan
Sébastien Bachollet, Sandra Hoferichter, Jimmy Schulz
Vanda Scartezini, León Sanchez, Harold Arcos
Tijani Ben Jemaa Seun Ojedeji, Wafa Dahmani
Liaisons:
Julie Hammer (SSAC), Maureen Hilyard (ccNSO) Olivier Crépin-Leblond (GNSO) Ron Sherwood (ccNSO), Yrjö Länsipuro (GAC)
Regional Leaders:
Aziz Hilali, Mohamed El Bashir,, Barrack Otieno
Humberto Carrasco, Maritza Aguero
Olivier Crépin-Leblond, Wolf Ludwig
Satish Babu, Ali AlMeshal, Pavani Budhrani
Glenn McKnight, Judith Hellerstein
Participants - Other At-Large Member:
León Sanchez, Cheryl Langdon-Orr, Dev Anand Teelucksingh
Participants:
EN:
ES:
FR:
Apologies: Alan Greenberg (tentative), León Sanchez
Staff: Heidi Ullrich, Silvia Vivanco, Terri Agnew, Gisella Gruber, Pierre Dandjinou, Ariel Liang, Yeşim Nazlar
Interpretors: ES: Veronica and SabrinaClaudia
FR: Claire Isabelle and Camila
Call Management: Yeşim Nazlar
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Recording: English, French, Spanish
Transcript: EN, FR, ES
Adobe Connect Chat: EN
Action Items: none N/A
Adobe Connect recording (slides) EN
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This At-Large Briefing Session will feature Matt Larson, Vice President of Research for the CTO office at ICANN, who will give a presentation and answer questions on the upcoming DNSSEC root key-signing key (KSK) rollover being planned by ICANN. The root KSK is the most important cryptographic key in the DNS security extensions, or DNSSEC. DNSSEC protects end users from receiving spoofed data and prevents attacks such as being misdirected to a malicious web site. This cryptographic key will be changed, or rolled over, in late 2017. While the actual change isn't happening until next year, an important aspect of the project is getting the word out to those who need to know about the change and take action, such as network administrators and software developers.
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