of course p2p is the way to distribute this but i doubt the justice department 
can admit there is any positive legitimate use for p2p.

(i’ve been surprised that it hasn’t made it to wikileaks or bittorrent yet.  
“russiar, are you listening?”)

(i sure hope there’s a signed version or at least a hash.)

i predict there will be versions with fake content, missing content, and 
malware inserted that are distributed as well.




and i’ll bet there will be some infected pdf version as well distributed that 
way.
On Apr 17, 2019, 7:57 PM -0700, fwessling--- via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>, wrote:
> And we may still see the web stack being the ultimate cause of the delay.
>
>
> Parkinson's law always comes to the rescue:-)
> More faster and efficient processing architecture, Hyper transport buses, 
> amd-64 Branch prediction.
> Massively faster storage subsystems and disk arrays, SSD slab caching for 
> hypervisors
>
> And some dude with a AJAX framework to serve a PDF bringging the whole thing 
> to a a screeching halt
>
> On April 17, 2019 10:35:29 PM EDT, Sean Donelan <s...@donelan.com> wrote:
> > On Wed, 17 Apr 2019, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
> > > Things will probably be easier this time. The Internet has evolved
> > ways
> > > of dealing with exactly this problem. (Avi used to call it “slash-dot
> >
> > > insurance”, but the idea is the same.) Specifically:
> >
> > Yep, it will be interesting to see where the chokepoints are tommorrow.
> >
> > In 1998, the bandwidth pipes never filled up. The chokepoint was in the
> >
> > TCP and Web stacks. Eventually the Associated Press got a copy of the
> > Starr Report on a CD from a congressional staffer. The press intern
> > running down the street holding a CD was faster than 1998 internet :-)
> >
> > We were also lucky in 1998, no one had thought of DDOS yet.
>
> Frederick Wessling (CIO)
> Succinct Systems LLC
> Cell: +1(561) 571-2799
> Office: +1(904) 758-9915 ext. 9925
> Fax: +1(904) 758-9987
> www.SuccinctSystems.com

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