At 12:53 PM 10/9/2003, you wrote:


On 9 Oct 2003, at 12:19, Vinny Abello wrote:

Personally, I think preventing residential broadband customers from hosting servers would limit a lot of that. I'm not saying that IS the solution. Whether or not that's the right thing to do in all circumstances for each ISP is a long standing debate that surfaces here from time to time. Same as allowing people to host mail servers on cable modems or even allowing them to access mail servers other than the ISP's.

"Hosting a server" looks very similar to "using an ftp client in active mode", "playing games over the network" or "using a SIP phone" to the network. Enumerating all permissible "servers" and denying all prohibited ones arguably requires an unreasonable shift of intelligence into the network. Allowing inbound connections by default and blocking specific types of traffic reactively has been demonstrated not to be an adequate solution, I think.


A more aggressive policy of blocking all inbound connections (and analogues using connectionless protocols) essentially denies direct access between edge devices, which implies quite an architectural shift.

I think it's more complicated than "prevent residential users from hosting servers".

Absolutely, and I was just referring to certain things, not all inbound access. I mentioned before that it doesn't really make much sense with web hosting because the port can easily be changed so it's not very effective at all. Blocking people from hosting mail servers that receive mail and can't send mail directly could be enforced much more easily than the web example so my original thought doesn't really apply all that much to web stuff, but then again I stated I didn't say that IS the solution to anything. Just a thought that's been kicked around forever that we've all heard. :)


Vinny Abello
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