OpenDNS offers new subscription-based secure DNS service; other vendors' DNS services to follow

One of the first cloud-based secure DNS services was launched today amid intensified concerns about locking down vulnerable Domain Name Service servers.

OpenDNS, which provides a free DNS service for consumers and schools, is offering a subscription-based commercial service for enterprises. Other vendors, such as Nominum, are considering offering secure DNS cloud services, as well.

DNS security has received more attention than ever in the wake of the discovery of a major DNS hole that was revealed by researcher Dan Kaminsky, and was later patched by several vendors. The so-called cache-poisoning flaw could allow an attacker to guess the transaction ID of a Web query and let the attacker hijack queries. Meanwhile, the Internet community has stepped up efforts to adopt the DNSSEC standard for protecting the DNS translation process from being compromised.

"One of the more troubling experiences from the DNS patching effort was realizing how many organizations didn't even know what DNS servers they were using internally. Recursive name servers tend to just 'run themselves,' only getting noticed when they either have to be patched, or when load exceeds some magic query per second level, at which point random things start breaking everywhere," says Kaminsky, who is director of penetration testing for IOActive. "Running DNS out of the cloud isn't a bad way around this -- the data is effectively public anyway, patching is guaranteed, and you know there's capacity to burn."

OpenDNS founder and CTO David Ulevitch says his company's new enterprise DNS services are currently in trial, and will be generally available in the fourth quarter. "We expect others to copy us" with similar services, he says, adding that they will compete somewhat with Web filtering products, he says, is that the OpenDNS services don't require implementation and hardware costs. "We don't do all the things [Websense and BlueCoat] do, but some are using us now and not renewing" with them, he says. "We do about 80 percent of what they do, but we are still focused on a DNS security solution."

Jon Shalowitz, vice president and general manager of Nominum, which sells DNS products, says a secure cloud-based DNS service helps organizations keep up with the security of their DNS. "This provides the advantage of real-time knowledge. If you were managing it yourself internally, you would have to do the heavy-lifting and wait for a patch or new signature," Shalowitz says.

"Enterprises do need to know what's under the hood," he adds. "What is the actual DNS solution being used by the provider? You need to make sure the [cloud] solution you are signing up for is something tried and true in networks around the world."

OpenDNS's new offerings include OpenDNS Deluxe for consumers and SMBs, and OpenDNS Enterprise for large enterprises. Pricing for the Deluxe service will be less than $20 per user per year; pricing for the Enterprise service depends on the size and scope of the installation, but will "cost a fraction of what competing products charge," according to OpenDNS.

The services don't include DNSSEC, and Ulevitch argues that there's more to securing DNS than DNSSEC: "We've done more to secure the DNS than the DNSSEC guys have done in the last 15 years. But DNSSEC is getting more traction," he says. "We believe [DNSSEC] is tragically flawed. Even if it's widely deployed, it will never be successful."

DNSSEC, for example, can't block malware from "phoning home" like OpenDNS's services can, he says.

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About the Author(s)

Kelly Jackson Higgins, Editor-in-Chief, Dark Reading

Kelly Jackson Higgins is the Editor-in-Chief of Dark Reading. She is an award-winning veteran technology and business journalist with more than two decades of experience in reporting and editing for various publications, including Network Computing, Secure Enterprise Magazine, Virginia Business magazine, and other major media properties. Jackson Higgins was recently selected as one of the Top 10 Cybersecurity Journalists in the US, and named as one of Folio's 2019 Top Women in Media. She began her career as a sports writer in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, and earned her BA at William & Mary. Follow her on Twitter @kjhiggins.

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