At 11:28 AM 7/3/2005, Valdis Kletnieks wrote:
On Sun, 03 Jul 2005 09:44:56 +0200, Peter Dambier said:
> http://xn--8pru44h.xn--55qx5d/
>
> Try to see their homepage!
I can't help it if they disregard RFC2826...
> ICANN does not want them.
> They dont want ICANN either.
This doesn't change the technical issues in rfc2826.
> European ISPs and Asian ISPs do change to the Public-Root because their
> customers need to send emails to each other. Curiously enough their is
> no SPAM on Public-Root email addresses. I thought the spammers were
> located in Asia and Europe only?
(A) You thought wrong. Just because a large percentage (not "only") arrives
from Asia and Europe doesn't mean the *spammer* is located there, any more
than
the fact that this e-mail went through one of Merit's servers means that I'm
actually in Michigan.
... Or that I'm in Vermont (or Virginia or California or Sweden (when
I'm working)) but my mail ISP is in Maryland ...
(B) Spammers send to addresses that are likely to get them money. Thus, the
lack of spam to public-root addresses isn't surprising.
(C) The fact that I *do* see spam advertising the availability of public-root
addresses should be an adequate predictor of what will happen if said
addresses
get any significant uptake.
> In Africa there is not much internet technology yet. They build on
> chinese technology because it is cheap and China supports their needs.
>
> What if their need is censoring and perfect control?
Go read this: http://65.246.255.51/rfc/rfc3675.txt
And ask yourself (a) why did that URL work at all, and (b) whether censoring
via top-level domain is likely to work.
As an interesting side note, my e-mail client (Eudora) helpfully popped
up the following message when checking the above URL:
"The host, http://65.246.255.52/rfc/rfc3675.txt, is a numerical IP
address; most legitimate sites use names, not addresses."
Besides some of the obvious comments (it was written by the Department
of Redundancy Department), I think this shows that "we" really do need to
keep legislators as informed as possible on the technical side of "How
Things Work" to try and keep the hysteria to a minimum.
Ted Fischer
p.s. Valdis ... didn't know that you were in Vermont, too ;-)
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