A new Chinese spying charge and sharpening rhetoric further poison US-China relations – with no end in sight

  1. A new Chinese spying charge and sharpening rhetoric further poison US-China relations – with no end in sight  Los Angeles Times
  2. Full coverage

china espionage – read more

Facebook Data Breach — What To Do Next

  1. Facebook Data Breach — What To Do Next  Forbes
  2. Facebook already hit with a lawsuit tied to the latest data breach  Mashable
  3. What comes next in Facebook’s major data breach  Yahoo News
  4. Security Update | Facebook Newsroom  Facebook Newsroom
  5. 50 million Facebook accounts were exposed: What we know, what you can do  USA TODAY
  6. Full coverage

data breach – read more

Cloudflare gets into registrar business with wholesale domains and free privacy

Article intro image

Enlarge / It’s not free, but it’s as close as you can get with TLDs and ICANN taking a cut. (credit: Cloudflare)

Cloudflare, the content delivery network and website security provider, has increasingly been pushing into businesses that intersect with its core missions. Earlier this year, the company rolled out a new, free DNS service to help Internet users evade censorship (including an encrypted DNS service to evade surveillance of domain address queries). Now, the company has announced a barrage of new services to celebrate its eighth “birthday”—and one of them is an at-cost domain registrar.

While Cloudflare had already been handling domain registration through the company’s Enterprise Registrar service, that service was intended for some of Cloudflare’s high-end customers who wanted extra levels of security for their domain names. The new domain registrar business—called Cloudflare Registrar—will eventually be open to anyone, and it will charge exactly what it costs for Cloudflare to register a domain. As Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince wrote in a blog post yesterday, “We promise to never charge you anything more than the wholesale price each TLD charges.” That includes the small fee assessed by ICANN for each registration.

Prince said that he was motivated to take the company into the registrar business because of Cloudflare’s own experience with registrars and by the perception that many registrars are in the business mostly to up-sell things that require no additional effort. “All the registrar does is record you as the owner of a particular domain,” Prince said. “That just involves sending some commands to an API. In other words, domain registrars are charging you for being a middle-man and delivering essentially no value to justify their markup.” Charging overhead for that sort of service, Prince said, “seemed as nutty to us as certificate authorities charging to run a bit of math.” (Cloudflare also provides free SSL certificates.)

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Biz & IT – Ars Technica