It’s to test whether the network  is using NX domain modification (or NX domain hijacking )

The browser generates three Tld domains on startup or when the network changes (when switching WiFi providers for eg) - if the browser gets the same IP address from two of those domains , it knows the network is modifying the NX errors it should receive and therefore treats any single word as a search query 

Otherwise, it would have to bug the user “did you mean to search for “word” or https://word” for every single word query 

The issue is that for networks reporting NX errors properly the root servers have to ultimately answer the query if the google generated tld exists 

The apnic blog post says “ but in the 10+ years since the feature was added, we now find that half of the DNS root server traffic is very likely due to Chromium’s probes. That equates to about 60 billion queries to the root server system on a typical day.” 

Dev Anand 


On Tue, 25 Aug 2020 at 6:35 PM, Carlton Samuels <carlton.samuels@gmail.com> wrote:
I'm still left with little understanding of why this is important?

What is the use of these lookups for the browser? A previously undisclosed security feature? 

And what is being alleged from the name service side? A unintentional DOS-type attack on the root server system itself? 

CAS.

On Tue, 25 Aug 2020, 3:39 pm Dev Anand Teelucksingh, <devtee@gmail.com> wrote:

The Chromium browser—open source, upstream parent to both Google Chrome and the new Microsoft Edge—is getting some serious negative attention for a well-intentioned feature that checks to see if a user's ISP is "hijacking" non-existent domain results.

The Intranet Redirect Detector, which makes spurious queries for random "domains" statistically unlikely to exist, is responsible for roughly half of the total traffic the world's root DNS servers receive. Verisign engineer Matt Thomas wrote a lengthy APNIC blog post outlining the problem and defining its scope.

Read rest of Ars Technica article : 
The APNIC blog post : 

Not aware if this is  mentioned before  in ICANN circles 

Dev Anand 



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