----- Original Message ----- From: "Jim Dalton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: RE: FW: [Dundi] DUNDi popularity

>>   Because DUNDi does not solve the simple problem of who is
>> authoritative for which numbers.

> If this shortcoming were solved, would DUNDi make sense for
a public
> network?

If a binding contract covers the obligation, and you are in a
ring of trust, do you require technical coverage of the issue
as well ?

Yes, this is my question. Would DUNDi be more successful in public networks
if there were technical means to enforce the obligations of a peering
agreement, such as honest representation of the numbers a DUNDi entity can
terminate and inter-carrier compensation.

I don't see a reason it would be less successful, and it does open the door to the possibility of increased success.

Since we already discussed using legal means of enforcement, what about if the protocol offered tracability of all exchanges, so that at the very least an IP address in known? In general this is easier to perform than lockdown (which will require the tracability anyway). Joe

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