Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Johnny Eriksson
Robert Bonomi wrote:

 Quick!  Somebody propose a snail-mail portability bill.  When a renter 
 changes to a different landlord, his snail-mail address will be optionally
 his  to take along, just like what is proposed for ISP clients.

No, a complete street address portability system.

Assuming that I live on 1337 Main Street, I should be able to keep that
address even if I move to a different part of town, and I should be able
to use it for all purposes, including when I give my home address to a
cab driver, and it should just work.  Why can't we get some reasonable
legislation like that enacted?

--Johnny



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Gadi Evron

On 2/22/10 7:28 PM, Joe Abley wrote:


On 2010-02-22, at 10:09, Gadi Evron wrote:


The email portability bill has just been approved by the Knesset's committee 
for legislation, sending it on its way for the full legislation process of the 
Israeli parliament.

While many users own a free email account, many in Israel still make use of 
their ISP's email service.


Just out of interest, are those ISP-tied e-mail addresses always run by the 
ISP, or are they occasionally outsourced in the manner of Rogers' (Canada) or 
BT's (UK) respective deals with Yahoo! (US)?

It'd be an interesting twist if contracts between e-mail providers outside 
Israel and ISPs inside suddenly made this requirement for e-mail address 
portability leak beyond Israel's borders.


It's an interesting question, I'm afraid I don't have the answer.

Gadi.





Joe





--
Gadi Evron,
g...@linuxbox.org.

Blog: http://gevron.livejournal.com/



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread D'Arcy J.M. Cain
On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 01:25:42 -0500
Steven Bellovin s...@cs.columbia.edu wrote:
 Figuring out how such a solution would work with email is left as an exercise 
 for the reader.

OK, let me give it a shot.

How about if we allow anyone to buy a domain name of their own and then
hire someone (e.g. their ISP) to manage email for it.  Now when they
want to change ISPs they just carry their domain with them to the new
ISP.  That way the only people incurring costs are the ISPs managing
the domains and the central domain name registrars, two groups who are
already being paid by the end user to provide the service.

You're using an email address in your ISP's domain?  OK, keep paying
for it and forward it using the control panel facility of your ISP.  If
your free account doesn't have that feature then maybe you have to ask
yourself what you expect for free.

Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that they
can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.

-- 
D'Arcy J.M. Cain da...@druid.net |  Democracy is three wolves
http://www.druid.net/darcy/|  and a sheep voting on
+1 416 425 1212 (DoD#0082)(eNTP)   |  what's for dinner.



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Cian Brennan
On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 05:39:53AM -0500, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
 On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 01:25:42 -0500
 Steven Bellovin s...@cs.columbia.edu wrote:
  Figuring out how such a solution would work with email is left as an 
  exercise for the reader.
 
 OK, let me give it a shot.
 
 How about if we allow anyone to buy a domain name of their own and then
 hire someone (e.g. their ISP) to manage email for it.  Now when they
 want to change ISPs they just carry their domain with them to the new
 ISP.  That way the only people incurring costs are the ISPs managing
 the domains and the central domain name registrars, two groups who are
 already being paid by the end user to provide the service.
 
 You're using an email address in your ISP's domain?  OK, keep paying
 for it and forward it using the control panel facility of your ISP.  If
 your free account doesn't have that feature then maybe you have to ask
 yourself what you expect for free.
 
 Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that they
 can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.
 
As has been pointed out several times, they can easily be pretty close. Simply
force them to send using the outgoing server of their new ISP, but allow them
to still access their mailbox (which is really the only important bit the ISP
hosts) over pop/imap/whatever. It's not free, but given that the average ISP
seems to give you only a few MB or space, it's hardly going to break the bank.

 -- 
 D'Arcy J.M. Cain da...@druid.net |  Democracy is three wolves
 http://www.druid.net/darcy/|  and a sheep voting on
 +1 416 425 1212 (DoD#0082)(eNTP)   |  what's for dinner.
 
 

-- 

-- 



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Leigh Porter

On 23/02/10 09:40, Johnny Eriksson wrote:

Robert Bonomi wrote:

   

Quick!  Somebody propose a snail-mail portability bill.  When a renter
changes to a different landlord, his snail-mail address will be optionally
his  to take along, just like what is proposed for ISP clients.
 

No, a complete street address portability system.

Assuming that I live on 1337 Main Street, I should be able to keep that
address even if I move to a different part of town, and I should be able
to use it for all purposes, including when I give my home address to a
cab driver, and it should just work.  Why can't we get some reasonable
legislation like that enacted?

--Johnny
   


Just wait till customers start wanting to take their IP address with 
them when they move...


When that happens, I hope there will be a new generation of suckers to 
fix it.


--
Leigh Porter




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Mans Nilsson
 Just wait till customers start wanting to take their IP address with  
 them when they move...

 When that happens, I hope there will be a new generation of suckers to  
 fix it.

There is PI space, you know ;) 

-- 
Måns Nilsson primary/secondary/besserwisser/machina
MN-1334-RIPE +46 705 989668
This PORCUPINE knows his ZIPCODE ... And he has VISA!!


pgplH6bD5DlCh.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

On 2/23/10 1:25 AM, Steven Bellovin wrote:
...

And who runs this database?

Local number portability requires a new database, one that didn't exist before, 
 It's run by a neutral party and maps any phone number to a carrier and 
endpoint identifier.  (In the US, that database is currently run by Neustar -- 
see http://www.neustar.biz/solutions/solutions-for/number-administration)


A circa 1998 leveraged buy out of the Communications Industry Services 
unit of Lockheed Martin (Warburg Pinkus et al, 71%, MidOcean Capital 
14%, ABS Capital 6%, and CEO Jeff Ganek  3%, as of 2005).


There are some NANOG employer entities similarly structured, but not 
many, so the oddity is worth mention.


Eric



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread D'Arcy J.M. Cain
[* Is trimming included text a lost art nowadays? *]

On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 10:43:23+ Cian Brennan
cian.bren...@redbrick.dcu.ie wrote:
  Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that they
  can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.
  
 As has been pointed out several times, they can easily be pretty close. Simply

Sure, they are sort of like if you squint.  Looked at another way they
are kind of like a specific name at a street address.  On the other
hand, what email addresses are exactly like is email addresses.
Metaphors are for illustrating something we already know, not for
proving something we don't.  Metaphors are like... Umm...

 force them to send using the outgoing server of their new ISP, but allow them

As soon as I see the word force I know I'm not going to like what
follows.  Why force them to use a specific server at all?  My clients
use my outgoing server no matter who they connect to.  I think what you
meant was that the old ISP should NOT be forced to continue supplying
the outgoing service.  That would make sense and requires no law.

 to still access their mailbox (which is really the only important bit the ISP
 hosts) over pop/imap/whatever. It's not free, but given that the average ISP
 seems to give you only a few MB or space, it's hardly going to break the bank.

If someone wants to maintain their old account for a while then what's
stopping them?  Cost?  That's no excuse for moving the cost to the old
supplier.  If your online identity is important to you then pay the
associated costs either with your own domain or by maintaining old
accounts.

My point is that everything necessary to solve the nominal problem is
already in place.  We don't need more laws.

-- 
D'Arcy J.M. Cain da...@druid.net |  Democracy is three wolves
http://www.druid.net/darcy/|  and a sheep voting on
+1 416 425 1212 (DoD#0082)(eNTP)   |  what's for dinner.



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Jeff Kell
On 2/23/2010 1:25 AM, Steven Bellovin wrote:
 Figuring out how such a solution would work with email is left as an exercise 
 for the reader.
   

Well, clearly, the planet just needs to join Active Directory, and the
user convert to Outlook, and use the Global Address List, and... 

[Sorry, I have heard that proposed by M$C** folks as a solution to just
about everything else in the universe]

:-)

Jeff







Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 11:20 PM, Dave CROCKER wrote:
 
 
 On 2/22/2010 8:42 PM, Larry Sheldon wrote:
 When Somebody calls one of my portable telephone numbers, they don't
 get a message telling them they have to call some other number.  The get
 call progress tones.
 
 
 You are confusing what is presented to the end-user with what might be going 
 on 
 within the infrastructure service.
 
 Call progress tones are the former and their primary goal is to keep the user 
 happy, providing very constrained information.  Especially for mobile phones, 
 there is often all sorts of forwarding signallying going on while you hear to 
 tones.

I understand that--and had not considered that the global inventory of
MTAs could be swapped out with stuff that could handle the redirection
mechanically.

I had left the telephone business by the time SS7 came along--how was
that introduced?  (I have assumed that it was as the #2, #4, and #5
machines and their equivalents were swapped out for ESS machines for a
lot of additional reasons.)

 In general, a core problem with the Knesset law is that it presumes something 
 that is viable for the phone infrastructure is equally - or at least 
 tolerably - 
 viable in the email infrastructure.  Unfortunately, the details of the two 
 are 
 massively different in terms of architecture, service model, cost structures 
 and 
 operational skills.

No kidding--something like making airlines do something railroads can do.

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread gordon b slater
On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 10:53 +, Leigh Porter wrote:
 
 Just wait till customers start wanting to take their IP address with 
 them when they move...

Oh wow, I think I've still got a log (somewhere) of all the dialup IPs I
was assigned during the early 90s. Since I might be able to claim them
first under consumer legislation

This thread may be getting sillier by hour, but it's got some
interesting suggestions tucked into it


Gord
--
currently drawing up a pre-emptive claim to about 88,234 AOL IPv4s and
several thousand Demon ones, tickety-tick-tick




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/23/2010 4:39 AM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:

 Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that they
 can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.

It occurs to me that maybe there is a reason why political conservatives
get so excited about minor, trivial erosions of sanity; why they worry
about where this might lead

It's been mentioned--why not portable street addresses.  Fire
departments will just have to adapt.

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread gordon b slater
On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 09:34 -0500, Jeff Kell wrote:

 Well, clearly, the planet just needs to join Active Directory, and the
 user convert to Outlook, and use the Global Address List, and... 
 

Ahem! If they (M$) were to go back to the LDAP specs, they could save a
lot of time. They could even re-brand the new Global AD with a simple
sed one-liner and reduce time-to-market at the same time.

 [Sorry, I have heard that proposed by M$C** folks as a solution to just
 about everything else in the universe]

Yeah, any more corporate/political hot air and this thread will burn
up :)

Gord

--
Gah! Portability, schmortability. Meh









Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Curtis Maurand

On 2/22/2010 12:02 PM, Joel Esler wrote:

I have an idea.  Everyone just get a gmail (or otherwise neutral account) 
like me.com or gmail.com or yahoo.com and be done with it.

J

   


Sure and give all that information to data mining companies with no 
interest in privacy.  No thank you.  I have a gmail account that I only 
use to test other accounts.  I don't need folks snooping in my emai as 
google does.


C




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/23/2010 4:43 AM, Cian Brennan wrote:

 As has been pointed out several times, they can easily be pretty close. Simply
 force them to send using the outgoing server of their new ISP, but allow them
 to still access their mailbox (which is really the only important bit the ISP
 hosts) over pop/imap/whatever. It's not free, but given that the average ISP
 seems to give you only a few MB or space, it's hardly going to break the bank.

and they get shut down for TOS violations (for extra credit, whose TOS
will apply?)(for more extra credit, who orders the shutdown?) they take
their portable address somewhere else.

Now what?

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread N. Yaakov Ziskind
Larry Sheldon wrote (on Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 10:28:03AM -0600):
 On 2/23/2010 4:39 AM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
 
  Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that they
  can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.
 
 It occurs to me that maybe there is a reason why political conservatives
 get so excited about minor, trivial erosions of sanity; why they worry
 about where this might lead
 
 It's been mentioned--why not portable street addresses.  Fire
 departments will just have to adapt.

If you want an example of just what would result, take a trip to Tokyo,
where house numbers were assigned in the order that building permits
were issued, and you need *extremely* detailed directions.

-- 
_
Nachman Yaakov Ziskind, FSPA, LLM   aw...@ziskind.us
Attorney and Counselor-at-Law   http://ziskind.us
Economic Group Pension Services http://egps.com
Actuaries and Employee Benefit Consultants



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Scott Brim
N. Yaakov Ziskind allegedly wrote on 02/23/2010 11:34 EST:
 Larry Sheldon wrote (on Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 10:28:03AM -0600):
 On 2/23/2010 4:39 AM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:

 Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that they
 can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.

 It occurs to me that maybe there is a reason why political conservatives
 get so excited about minor, trivial erosions of sanity; why they worry
 about where this might lead

 It's been mentioned--why not portable street addresses.  Fire
 departments will just have to adapt.
 
 If you want an example of just what would result, take a trip to Tokyo,
 where house numbers were assigned in the order that building permits
 were issued, and you need *extremely* detailed directions.
 

Simple: you separate 'mail' addresses from 'fire' addresses.  Mail
addresses are identifiers.  Fire addresses are locators.



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Owen DeLong

On Feb 23, 2010, at 8:34 AM, N. Yaakov Ziskind wrote:

 Larry Sheldon wrote (on Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 10:28:03AM -0600):
 On 2/23/2010 4:39 AM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:
 
 Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that they
 can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.
 
 It occurs to me that maybe there is a reason why political conservatives
 get so excited about minor, trivial erosions of sanity; why they worry
 about where this might lead
 
 It's been mentioned--why not portable street addresses.  Fire
 departments will just have to adapt.
 
 If you want an example of just what would result, take a trip to Tokyo,
 where house numbers were assigned in the order that building permits
 were issued, and you need *extremely* detailed directions.
 
Seoul is a good example of this as well, but, no-one is even sure that
building age is actually determinant in Seoul. Most of the Koreans I
was working with swear that addresses are assigned by a random
number generator without duplicate detection.

Owen




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Shane Ronan

When in Tokyo, always have a MAP showing where you want to go.

On Feb 23, 2010, at 11:34 AM, N. Yaakov Ziskind wrote:


Larry Sheldon wrote (on Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 10:28:03AM -0600):

On 2/23/2010 4:39 AM, D'Arcy J.M. Cain wrote:

Maybe politicians should just keep their nose out of things that  
they

can't understand.  Email addresses aren't phone numbers.


It occurs to me that maybe there is a reason why political  
conservatives
get so excited about minor, trivial erosions of sanity; why they  
worry

about where this might lead

It's been mentioned--why not portable street addresses.  Fire
departments will just have to adapt.


If you want an example of just what would result, take a trip to  
Tokyo,

where house numbers were assigned in the order that building permits
were issued, and you need *extremely* detailed directions.

--
_
Nachman Yaakov Ziskind, FSPA, LLM   aw...@ziskind.us
Attorney and Counselor-at-Law   http://ziskind.us
Economic Group Pension Services http://egps.com
Actuaries and Employee Benefit Consultants






Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Cian Brennan
On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 10:32:45AM -0600, Larry Sheldon wrote:
 On 2/23/2010 4:43 AM, Cian Brennan wrote:
 
  As has been pointed out several times, they can easily be pretty close. 
  Simply
  force them to send using the outgoing server of their new ISP, but allow 
  them
  to still access their mailbox (which is really the only important bit the 
  ISP
  hosts) over pop/imap/whatever. It's not free, but given that the average ISP
  seems to give you only a few MB or space, it's hardly going to break the 
  bank.
 
 and they get shut down for TOS violations (for extra credit, whose TOS
 will apply?)(for more extra credit, who orders the shutdown?) they take
 their portable address somewhere else.
 
We deal with this problem *already* everytime someone smtps from their ISPs
mailserver with an address not provided by their ISP. If the issue is outbound
mail, they can be blocked from sending outbound mail. If the issue is inbound
mail, they've broken the original ISP's TOS and in both cases, can be dealt
with as normal.

 Now what?
 
 -- 
 Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
 take everything you have.
 
 Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.
 
 Requiescas in pace o email
 Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
 Eppure si rinfresca
 
 ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
 http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml
   
 
 

-- 

-- 



Kill this thread: Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread John Sage

Larry Sheldon wrote:

On 2/23/2010 4:43 AM, Cian Brennan wrote:


As has been pointed out several times, they can easily be pretty close. Simply
force them to send using the outgoing server of their new ISP, but allow them
to still access their mailbox (which is really the only important bit the ISP
hosts) over pop/imap/whatever. It's not free, but given that the average ISP
seems to give you only a few MB or space, it's hardly going to break the bank.


and they get shut down for TOS violations (for extra credit, whose TOS
will apply?)(for more extra credit, who orders the shutdown?) they take
their portable address somewhere else.

Now what?





Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Dave CROCKER



On 2/23/2010 8:44 AM, Scott Brim wrote:

Simple: you separate 'mail' addresses from 'fire' addresses.  Mail
addresses are identifiers.  Fire addresses are locators.


wrong approach.

simply get fire engines to have heat sensors and set their gps accordingly.

d/

--

  Dave Crocker
  Brandenburg InternetWorking
  bbiw.net



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Rob Pickering
--On 23 February 2010 09:06 -0600 Larry Sheldon 
larryshel...@cox.net wrote:

No kidding--something like making airlines do something railroads
can do.


I guess that depends whether you are talking about issuing flexible 
tickets or cruising at zero feet.


--
Rob.



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Michael Dillon
 If you want an example of just what would result, take a trip to Tokyo,
 where house numbers were assigned in the order that building permits
 were issued, and you need *extremely* detailed directions.

The Soviet Union was not quite as chaotic as that, but they also didn't
keep an organized system of building placement and street numbering.
On this map of Kiev, it shows the building numbers so you can see how
some of them are not easy to find from the street.

http://wikimapia.org/#lat=50.4454261lon=30.5302334z=16l=0m=m

--Michael Dillon



Re: Kill this thread: Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/23/2010 10:54 AM, John Sage wrote:

Unquote

I'd want to trade my email address for one that doesn't trigger empty
responses.

Or get me banned.

But he's right, we should take the discussion of operational issues
somewhere else.
-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Joel Jaeggli


Johnny Eriksson wrote:
 Robert Bonomi wrote:
 
 Quick!  Somebody propose a snail-mail portability bill.  When a renter 
 changes to a different landlord, his snail-mail address will be optionally
 his  to take along, just like what is proposed for ISP clients.
 
 No, a complete street address portability system.

street addresses aren't so discrete that everyone doesn't handle them
slightly differently.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Address_(geography)

And over course if you want to totally overhual the way you do things
you can just build your method as a hostile overlay on another system,
there's a long and proud tradition of doing so.

 Assuming that I live on 1337 Main Street, I should be able to keep that
 address even if I move to a different part of town, and I should be able
 to use it for all purposes, including when I give my home address to a
 cab driver, and it should just work.  Why can't we get some reasonable
 legislation like that enacted?
 
 --Johnny
 



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-23 Thread Barry Shein

The suggestion to own your own domain name coupled with some consumer
protection against practices which resist transferring domain names to
a new provider solves this problem well enough.

Maybe that's even what's slipping thru the cracks of these 10 second
mechanical google translations?


-- 
-Barry Shein

The World  | b...@theworld.com   | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 800-THE-WRLD| Dial-Up: US, PR, Canada
Software Tool  Die| Public Access Internet | SINCE 1989 *oo*



Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Gadi Evron
The email portability bill has just been approved by the Knesset's 
committee for legislation, sending it on its way for the full 
legislation process of the Israeli parliament.


While many users own a free email account, many in Israel still make use 
of their ISP's email service.


According to this proposed bill, when a client transfers to a different 
ISP the email address will optionally be his to take along, just like 
mobile providers do today with phone numbers.


This new legislation makes little technological sense, and will 
certainly be a mess to handle operationally as well as beurocratically, 
but it certainly is interesting, and at least the notion is beautiful.


The proposed bill can be found here [Doc, Hebrew]:
http://my.ynet.co.il/pic/computers/22022010/mail.doc

Linked to from this ynet (leading Israeli news site) story, here:
http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3852744,00.html

I will update this as things evolve on my blog, here:
http://gadievron.blogspot.com/

Gadi.



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread James Jones
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:09 AM, Gadi Evron g...@linuxbox.org wrote:

 The email portability bill has just been approved by the Knesset's
 committee for legislation, sending it on its way for the full legislation
 process of the Israeli parliament.

 While many users own a free email account, many in Israel still make use of
 their ISP's email service.

 According to this proposed bill, when a client transfers to a different ISP
 the email address will optionally be his to take along, just like mobile
 providers do today with phone numbers.

 This new legislation makes little technological sense, and will certainly
 be a mess to handle operationally as well as beurocratically, but it
 certainly is interesting, and at least the notion is beautiful.

 The proposed bill can be found here [Doc, Hebrew]:
 http://my.ynet.co.il/pic/computers/22022010/mail.doc

 Linked to from this ynet (leading Israeli news site) story, here:
 http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3852744,00.html

 I will update this as things evolve on my blog, here:
 http://gadievron.blogspot.com/

Gadi.




Why does this seem like a really bad idea?


-james


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Robert Brockway

On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:


Why does this seem like a really bad idea?


While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:

1) Large and increasing quantity of email will be forwarded between 
Israeli ISPs, loading their networks with traffic that could have been 
avoided.


2) Every time someone changes ISP and wants to continue using this address 
they will need to notify their original ISP, who they may not have had a 
business relationship with for many years.  This will be a significant 
operational challenge I expect.  How do you confirm the person notifying 
you is the real owner of the address, for example?


IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email 
for a reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make 
relevant notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).


Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's 
report here.


Cheers,

Rob

--
Email: rob...@timetraveller.org
IRC: Solver
Web: http://www.practicalsysadmin.com
I tried to change the world but they had a no-return policy



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Steven Bellovin

On Feb 22, 2010, at 11:24 AM, Robert Brockway wrote:

 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:
 
 Why does this seem like a really bad idea?
 
 While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:
 
 1) Large and increasing quantity of email will be forwarded between Israeli 
 ISPs, loading their networks with traffic that could have been avoided.
 
 2) Every time someone changes ISP and wants to continue using this address 
 they will need to notify their original ISP, who they may not have had a 
 business relationship with for many years.  This will be a significant 
 operational challenge I expect.  How do you confirm the person notifying you 
 is the real owner of the address, for example?
 
 IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email for a 
 reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make relevant 
 notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).
 
 Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's 
 report here.
 

Bring back the MB or MR DNS records?  (Only half a smiley.)


--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb








Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Dorn Hetzel
I am sure the various carriers faced with the onset of Local Number
Portability and WLNP in this part of the world would have been happy to
escape with only forwarding phone calls for 3 months.

Alas, such was not their fate :)

I would watch out for this idea, it might actually catch on in various
places, warts and all...

On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 11:24 AM, Robert Brockway
rob...@timetraveller.orgwrote:

 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:

  Why does this seem like a really bad idea?


 While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:

 1) Large and increasing quantity of email will be forwarded between Israeli
 ISPs, loading their networks with traffic that could have been avoided.

 2) Every time someone changes ISP and wants to continue using this address
 they will need to notify their original ISP, who they may not have had a
 business relationship with for many years.  This will be a significant
 operational challenge I expect.  How do you confirm the person notifying you
 is the real owner of the address, for example?

 IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email for
 a reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make
 relevant notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).

 Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's
 report here.

 Cheers,

 Rob

 --
 Email: rob...@timetraveller.org
 IRC: Solver
 Web: http://www.practicalsysadmin.com
 I tried to change the world but they had a no-return policy




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread James Jones
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 11:24 AM, Robert Brockway
rob...@timetraveller.orgwrote:


 IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email for
 a reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make
 relevant notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).


To me that seems reasonable. but if they do what has been suggested how long
before the rest of world implements the same policy? Also wouldn't this help
put the final nails in email's coffin? Also what about ISPs choosing to stop
providing email services?


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Cian Brennan
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 04:24:54PM +, Robert Brockway wrote:
 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:

 Why does this seem like a really bad idea?

 While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:

 1) Large and increasing quantity of email will be forwarded between  
 Israeli ISPs, loading their networks with traffic that could have been  
 avoided.

Same thing applies to mobile companies. Realistically, this isn't going to be a
particularly massive amount of traffic.

 2) Every time someone changes ISP and wants to continue using this 
 address they will need to notify their original ISP, who they may not 
 have had a business relationship with for many years.  This will be a 
 significant operational challenge I expect.  How do you confirm the 
 person notifying you is the real owner of the address, for example?

This bit is slightly more difficult. All the same, you can easily figure out a
password system for talking to support (with a login password, and a support
password, say. Not the most secure thing possible, but in practise as good as
any ISPs mail system's is likely to be.)
 IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email  
 for a reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make  
 relevant notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).

Changing an email address takes far longer than 3 months, ime. I still get the
odd mail to one I stopped using 3-4 years ago.

 Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's  
 report here.

 Cheers,

 Rob

 -- 
 Email: rob...@timetraveller.org
 IRC: Solver
 Web: http://www.practicalsysadmin.com
 I tried to change the world but they had a no-return policy



-- 

-- 



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Jeff Kell
There's no way to do this without some underlying forwarding...  and
aside from the obvious inefficiencies, bear in mind that any spam
mitigation devices on the last hop that decide they are receiving spam
are going to direct their wrath (reputation scores, blacklisting,
greylisting, rate limiting, what-have-you) at the last forwarding hop,
not at the origin.

We get enough collateral damage from legitimate voluntary forwarding
already.  I would shudder to think of mandated, irrevocable forwarding.

Jeff




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 10:24 AM, Robert Brockway wrote:
 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:
 
 Why does this seem like a really bad idea?
 
 While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:

I dare say.

I own example.  I fire George for a long list of foul deeds.  He goes to
work for another company and writes email from geo...@example.com that
injures my reputation.

Not a good plan at all.

 1) Large and increasing quantity of email will be forwarded between 
 Israeli ISPs, loading their networks with traffic that could have been 
 avoided.

Believe it or not, some people have email addresses that are not
intrinsically ISP addresses.

 2) Every time someone changes ISP and wants to continue using this address 
 they will need to notify their original ISP, who they may not have had a 
 business relationship with for many years.  This will be a significant 
 operational challenge I expect.  How do you confirm the person notifying 
 you is the real owner of the address, for example?

Again, it might all be within one ISP--and is still irrelevant.

 IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email 
 for a reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make 
 relevant notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).

Governments requiring people to do things that are not good ideas often
have unexpected (even if obvious) consequences.

My reaction, if I were in a position to do so, would be to stop
providing email addresses.

 Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's 
 report here.

Why is that relevant?

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Patrick Giagnocavo
Gadi Evron wrote:
 The email portability bill has just been approved by the Knesset's
 committee for legislation, sending it on its way for the full
 legislation process of the Israeli parliament.
 
 While many users own a free email account, many in Israel still make use
 of their ISP's email service.
 
 According to this proposed bill, when a client transfers to a different
 ISP the email address will optionally be his to take along, just like
 mobile providers do today with phone numbers.
 

Likely result:  less ISPs will offer email services as part of the
package, or will find some other way to shift responsibility to a third
party.

--Patrick



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Cian Brennan
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:30:53AM -0600, Larry Sheldon wrote:
 On 2/22/2010 10:24 AM, Robert Brockway wrote:
  On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:
  
  Why does this seem like a really bad idea?
  
  While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:
 
 I dare say.
 
 I own example.  I fire George for a long list of foul deeds.  He goes to
 work for another company and writes email from geo...@example.com that
 injures my reputation.
 
 Not a good plan at all.
 
  1) Large and increasing quantity of email will be forwarded between 
  Israeli ISPs, loading their networks with traffic that could have been 
  avoided.
 
 Believe it or not, some people have email addresses that are not
 intrinsically ISP addresses.
 
  2) Every time someone changes ISP and wants to continue using this address 
  they will need to notify their original ISP, who they may not have had a 
  business relationship with for many years.  This will be a significant 
  operational challenge I expect.  How do you confirm the person notifying 
  you is the real owner of the address, for example?
 
 Again, it might all be within one ISP--and is still irrelevant.
 
Actually, this is really simple to fix. Don't provide smtp service, only
pop/imap. Then they never need to contact you. At least one Irish ISP already
does something similar for ex-subscribers.

  IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email 
  for a reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make 
  relevant notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).
 
 Governments requiring people to do things that are not good ideas often
 have unexpected (even if obvious) consequences.
 
 My reaction, if I were in a position to do so, would be to stop
 providing email addresses.
 
  Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's 
  report here.
 
 Why is that relevant?
 
 -- 
 Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
 take everything you have.
 
 Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.
 
 Requiescas in pace o email
 Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
 Eppure si rinfresca
 
 ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
 http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml
   
 
 

-- 

-- 



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Mustafa Golam -
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:30 PM, Larry Sheldon larryshel...@cox.netwrote:

 On 2/22/2010 10:24 AM, Robert Brockway wrote:
  On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:
 
  Why does this seem like a really bad idea?
 
  While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:

 I dare say.

 I own example.  I fire George for a long list of foul deeds.  He goes to
 work for another company and writes email from geo...@example.com that
 injures my reputation.

 Not a good plan at all.


I think, it will apply only users's email address, not of employee of the
particular ISP.

--Mustafa


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Owen DeLong
There are huge differences in LNP/WLNP vs. Email Address portability.

Prior to LNP/WLNP, there was already SS7 which is, essentially a centralized
layer of indirection for phone numbers. This was necessary in order to support
multiple LECs serving the same NPA-NXX anyway.  Once that was in place,
LNP/WLNP was almost a no-brainer from a call routing perspective. The
issue was with the administrative process and the level of ethics exhibited
by some of the phone-company participants (slamming, etc.).  We saw the
same thing in DNS.  LNP is much more like domain name portability
than email address portability.  We already have domain name portability
and had it long before LNP/WLNP.

The owner of a domain has always been able to change the NS records
pointing to the authoritative DNS servers for said domain.

If users care about email portability, they should simply get their own
domain and move the domain around as they see fit.  Given google
and other email hosting providers which will trivially host your email
domain and the low annual cost of registering a domain, I'm not sure
why legislators would think doing it differently is a good idea.  If I were
an Israeli ISP and this law were to pass, I'd simply discontinue providing
email service for my customers and suggest they get their email via
Google, Yahoo, or other free email service.

Owen

On Feb 22, 2010, at 8:26 AM, Dorn Hetzel wrote:

 I am sure the various carriers faced with the onset of Local Number
 Portability and WLNP in this part of the world would have been happy to
 escape with only forwarding phone calls for 3 months.
 
 Alas, such was not their fate :)
 
 I would watch out for this idea, it might actually catch on in various
 places, warts and all...
 
 On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 11:24 AM, Robert Brockway
 rob...@timetraveller.orgwrote:
 
 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, James Jones wrote:
 
 Why does this seem like a really bad idea?
 
 
 While I think the principal is noble there are operational problems:
 
 1) Large and increasing quantity of email will be forwarded between Israeli
 ISPs, loading their networks with traffic that could have been avoided.
 
 2) Every time someone changes ISP and wants to continue using this address
 they will need to notify their original ISP, who they may not have had a
 business relationship with for many years.  This will be a significant
 operational challenge I expect.  How do you confirm the person notifying you
 is the real owner of the address, for example?
 
 IMHO it would have been better to require the ISPs to forward the email for
 a reasonable period of time (say 3 months) to allow the user to make
 relevant notifications (or just stop using an ISP bound email address).
 
 Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's
 report here.
 
 Cheers,
 
 Rob
 
 --
 Email: rob...@timetraveller.org
 IRC: Solver
 Web: http://www.practicalsysadmin.com
 I tried to change the world but they had a no-return policy
 
 




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Dorn Hetzel


 I dare say.

 I own example.  I fire George for a long list of foul deeds.  He goes to
 work for another company and writes email from geo...@example.com that
 injures my reputation.


I suspect we are only talking about email addresses provided as part of a
commercial service, not as an aspect of one's job.

For example, if I have a Nextel cellphone, and then they get bought by
Sprint and I decide they now suck, and I move my phone service to T-Mobile
so I can get a cool new G1, then Sprint is obliged to release my phone
number and let T-Mobile provide my new service using it.

However, if I work for Bob's Widgets, and they fire me because I'm a
slacker, I'm not expecting I get to keep the number associated with my
work-issued cellphone, no matter what carrier issued it...  Even if Bob's
Widgets was really a carrier providing a phone on their own network...

-dorn


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
A thing being missed here is this:

A telephone number does not have an obvious affinity with personal
intellectual-property-like information.  (402 332- is not obviously
a Northwest Bell-USWest-Quest telephone number, but at least two of them
are now served by Cox.  A person using a 917 NNX- number in has now
turned useful information into noise, but that is not quite the same thing.)

An email address that ends in example.com irrevocably ties the address
user to the company Example and may in fact be affirmatively harmful
beyond the technical difficulty of implementation.

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Mon, 22 Feb 2010 10:30:53 CST, Larry Sheldon said:

  Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's 
  report here.
 
 Why is that relevant?

For the same reason that if I cited a link that lead to a page in Latvian,
you'd have a hard time double-checking that my 4-line summary of the page
actually matched what the page said, so you'd have to run with my 4-line
summary.

Google Translate actually does a reasonable job at first-pass translation
of Latvian that captures the general gist of it, but it still makes me
facepalm on occasion.  Of course, the more critical the exact nuances,
the more likely it is to egregiously screw up.  It's 17C in Riga works
fine, but the distinction between mandate new laws and recommend new 
policies
still troubles it.



pgpSM8qoZtb6q.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Mustafa Golam -
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:49 PM, Larry Sheldon larryshel...@cox.netwrote:



 An email address that ends in example.com irrevocably ties the address
 user to the company Example and may in fact be affirmatively harmful
 beyond the technical difficulty of implementation.

 IMHO, ISPs would be forged to take Google's policy of Email addresses.

x...@gmail.com for beta-users, like you and me; while x...@google.com for
employees. But surely it will create technical implication along with many
others.

--
Mustafa


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 11:19 AM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010 10:30:53 CST, Larry Sheldon said:
 
 Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's 
 report here.

 Why is that relevant?
 
 For the same reason that if I cited a link that lead to a page in Latvian,
 you'd have a hard time double-checking that my 4-line summary of the page
 actually matched what the page said, so you'd have to run with my 4-line
 summary.
 
 Google Translate actually does a reasonable job at first-pass translation
 of Latvian that captures the general gist of it, but it still makes me
 facepalm on occasion.  Of course, the more critical the exact nuances,
 the more likely it is to egregiously screw up.  It's 17C in Riga works
 fine, but the distinction between mandate new laws and recommend new 
 policies
 still troubles it.

You don't note when you are taking somebody's word when they write in
English.

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Suresh Ramasubramanian
Am I missing something?  All the ISP has to do is to provision a pop3
/ imap / webmail mailbox for that user and keep it around.

On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:14 PM, Owen DeLong o...@delong.com wrote:
 There are huge differences in LNP/WLNP vs. Email Address portability.

 Prior to LNP/WLNP, there was already SS7 which is, essentially a centralized
 layer of indirection for phone numbers. This was necessary in order to support



-- 
Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com)



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 11:22 AM, Mustafa Golam - wrote:
 On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:49 PM, Larry Sheldon larryshel...@cox.netwrote:
 
 

 An email address that ends in example.com irrevocably ties the address
 user to the company Example and may in fact be affirmatively harmful
 beyond the technical difficulty of implementation.


I don't think I said the following line--if I was demented enough to
have done that, I retract it.

 IMHO, ISPs would be forged to take Google's policy of Email addresses.
 
 x...@gmail.com for beta-users, like you and me; while x...@google.com for
 employees. But surely it will create technical implication along with many
 others.

And I am talking about places that people that have no connection with g[.*]

The key that I missed, and we have to hope the pols did not is that
question of ownership.

I think you will see a drying up of availability of email--which has
interesting implications in the realm of unique addresses possible, for
example.

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Robert Brockway

On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, Dorn Hetzel wrote:


I am sure the various carriers faced with the onset of Local Number
Portability and WLNP in this part of the world would have been happy to
escape with only forwarding phone calls for 3 months.


I'm sure they would :)

I know very little of the workings of cell (or landline) phone networks 
but I expect if it worked the same way Internet routing does then the 
Telco networks would have had serious problems under the weight of 
rerouted calls.




I would watch out for this idea, it might actually catch on in various
places, warts and all...


OTOH if it fails in a screaming heap in Israel it may show everyone else 
why it is a bad idea :)


Cheers,

Rob

--
Email: rob...@timetraveller.org
IRC: Solver
Web: http://www.practicalsysadmin.com
I tried to change the world but they had a no-return policy



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 11:28 AM, Joe Abley wrote:
 
 On 2010-02-22, at 10:09, Gadi Evron wrote:
 
 The email portability bill has just been approved by the Knesset's
 committee for legislation, sending it on its way for the full
 legislation process of the Israeli parliament.
 
 While many users own a free email account, many in Israel still
 make use of their ISP's email service.
 
 Just out of interest, are those ISP-tied e-mail addresses always run
 by the ISP, or are they occasionally outsourced in the manner of
 Rogers' (Canada) or BT's (UK) respective deals with Yahoo! (US)?
 
 It'd be an interesting twist if contracts between e-mail providers
 outside Israel and ISPs inside suddenly made this requirement for
 e-mail address portability leak beyond Israel's borders.

I have been wondering about that too--the Internet may be the only
artifact of human existence that is generally border insensitive (with
exceptions we don't need to enumerate).

I note that quite a few country TLDs are hosted in other countries.
Whose laws prevail?


-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Joe Abley

On 2010-02-22, at 10:09, Gadi Evron wrote:

 The email portability bill has just been approved by the Knesset's committee 
 for legislation, sending it on its way for the full legislation process of 
 the Israeli parliament.
 
 While many users own a free email account, many in Israel still make use of 
 their ISP's email service.

Just out of interest, are those ISP-tied e-mail addresses always run by the 
ISP, or are they occasionally outsourced in the manner of Rogers' (Canada) or 
BT's (UK) respective deals with Yahoo! (US)?

It'd be an interesting twist if contracts between e-mail providers outside 
Israel and ISPs inside suddenly made this requirement for e-mail address 
portability leak beyond Israel's borders.


Joe




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 11:29 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
 Am I missing something?  All the ISP has to do is to provision a pop3
 / imap / webmail mailbox for that user and keep it around.

And provide storage, support, .., mail-bomb cleanup.

Whose TOS applies?

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Robert Brockway

On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, Larry Sheldon wrote:


Believe it or not, some people have email addresses that are not
intrinsically ISP addresses.


Indeed.  I'm sure pretty much everyone here know why ISPs offer email 
services.



My reaction, if I were in a position to do so, would be to stop
providing email addresses.


Yes this may well be a sensible business decision.


Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's
report here.


Why is that relevant?


Because I don't speak Hebrew.  The statement is a disclaimer that I need 
to rely on Gadi's summary rather than reading the thing in detail for 
myself, as I would have preferred to do.


Cheers,

Rob

--
Email: rob...@timetraveller.org
IRC: Solver
Web: http://www.practicalsysadmin.com
I tried to change the world but they had a no-return policy



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Eric Brunner-Williams

On 2/22/10 12:28 PM, Joe Abley wrote:


On 2010-02-22, at 10:09, Gadi Evron wrote:

...

It'd be an interesting twist if contracts between e-mail providers outside 
Israel and ISPs inside suddenly made this requirement for e-mail address 
portability leak beyond Israel's borders.


Off-list I asked an equivalent transitive service provisioning 
question for a service not mentioned, but possibly associated with ISP 
provided email services. The technical issue area is IDNAbis and EAI 
for those interested in the specification aspect.


I've no clear answer as yet, and my interest is semi-academic.

Eric



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Barry Shein

My initial reaction: Does the law in any way imply this mail address
has to be provided for free?

If not then I don't see any real problem on the surface. It just means
we have to offer the opportunity to keep the mail address functioning
for a fee.

That said, what does occur to me is what happens when we've closed
someone's account for email abuse (e.g., a spammer)?

That thought might be extended to non-payment, if an account is closed
for non-payment is there any further obligation under this law?

I assume sane heads will prevail in such cases but until then this
might conceivably create a loophole for some miscreant to harass the
provider. As a general rule miscreants often have no shame.

I suppose the whole forwarding / spamblocking issue arises but that's
not any different than any service which allows forwarding.

-- 
-Barry Shein

The World  | b...@theworld.com   | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 800-THE-WRLD| Dial-Up: US, PR, Canada
Software Tool  Die| Public Access Internet | SINCE 1989 *oo*



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Florian Weimer
* Steven Bellovin:

 Bring back the MB or MR DNS records?  (Only half a smiley.)

Eh, you don't want to put this information into a public database.
Officially, for privacy reasons.  Unofficially, to create a barrier to
market entry.



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Mon, 22 Feb 2010 11:24:09 CST, Larry Sheldon said:

 You don't note when you are taking somebody's word when they write in
 English.

Actually, we do.

So tell me Larry - if I cited a Latvian web page, and gave a summary, would
you feel comfortable blindly passing it along without mentioning the fact
that you were unable to verify what the page said?

What if I quoted a web page in English that was slashdotted or otherwise
404'ed by the time you tried to look at it, so you never saw the page but
only what I allegedly quoted?  Would you pass *that* along without notice
as well? Or would you note the page 404's for me?


pgpwJCUN1y6mE.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 12:34 PM, Barry Shein wrote:

 That said, what does occur to me is what happens when we've closed
 someone's account for email abuse (e.g., a spammer)?

I've been thinking about that issue--spammer drop-boxes.

But we are not supposed to talk about spammers here so I was going to
take it up on NANAE.

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Dave CROCKER



On 2/22/2010 9:29 AM, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:

Am I missing something?  All the ISP has to do is to provision a pop3
/ imap / webmail mailbox for that user and keep it around.


As a permanent requirement for all accounts, including changes as the user moves 
around -- long-term churn is 100% within relatively few years-- and to expect 
all domain owners who originally host a mailbox to then do this forwarding admin 
and ops competently, this is going to be a serious problem.


The scheme is certain to be quite unreliable along multiple axes.

Worse, I had not thought of Sheldon's excellent point about negative reputation 
blowback on the domain owner.


Per the followup comments on this, the domain owner might be able to do some 
things in domain name usage and IP Address assignment to mitigate this, the 
initial and on-going costs of getting this right and the likelihood of 
eliminating all blowback are problematic.


d/
--

  Dave Crocker
  Brandenburg InternetWorking
  bbiw.net



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Steven Bellovin

On Feb 22, 2010, at 1:42 PM, Florian Weimer wrote:

 * Steven Bellovin:
 
 Bring back the MB or MR DNS records?  (Only half a smiley.)
 
 Eh, you don't want to put this information into a public database.
 Officially, for privacy reasons.  Unofficially, to create a barrier to
 market entry.
 
Right; I was not seriously suggesting that the DNS was the right spot for it.  
I am seriously suggesting that a redirect mechanism -- perhaps the email 
equivalent of HTPP's 301/302 -- would be worth considering.  Then, of course, 
there's problem of upgrading the $\aleph_0$ mail senders out there to comply...




--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb








Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 12:42 PM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010 11:24:09 CST, Larry Sheldon said:
 
 You don't note when you are taking somebody's word when they write in
 English.
 
 Actually, we do.
 
 So tell me Larry - if I cited a Latvian web page, and gave a summary, would
 you feel comfortable blindly passing it along without mentioning the fact
 that you were unable to verify what the page said?

Yes.  If I cited it would indicate that I trusted your judgment.  I
would expect you to feel insulted if I said that in this exceptional
case I trusted you, but I didn't think that should be assumed.
 
 What if I quoted a web page in English that was slashdotted or otherwise
 404'ed by the time you tried to look at it, so you never saw the page but
 only what I allegedly quoted?  Would you pass *that* along without notice
 as well? Or would you note the page 404's for me?

I might very well say Valdis said to identify the source.  I would
not normal grade the quality of the reference.

I'm out.
-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Michael Dillon
 Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's
 report here.

Why on earth would you trust Gadi when you could trust me and some
acquaintances at Google?
http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?js=yprev=_thl=enie=UTF-8layout=1eotf=1u=http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3852744,00.htmlsl=autotl=en

--Michael Dillon



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Joel Esler
I have an idea.  Everyone just get a gmail (or otherwise neutral account) 
like me.com or gmail.com or yahoo.com and be done with it.

J

On Feb 22, 2010, at 11:49 AM, Larry Sheldon wrote:

 A thing being missed here is this:
 
 A telephone number does not have an obvious affinity with personal
 intellectual-property-like information.  (402 332- is not obviously
 a Northwest Bell-USWest-Quest telephone number, but at least two of them
 are now served by Cox.  A person using a 917 NNX- number in has now
 turned useful information into noise, but that is not quite the same thing.)
 
 An email address that ends in example.com irrevocably ties the address
 user to the company Example and may in fact be affirmatively harmful
 beyond the technical difficulty of implementation.
 
 -- 
 Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
 take everything you have.
 
 Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.
 
 Requiescas in pace o email
 Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
 Eppure si rinfresca
 
 ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
 http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml
   
 

--
Joel Esler
http://blog.joelesler.net





Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Tony Finch
On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, Steven Bellovin wrote:

 I am seriously suggesting that a redirect mechanism -- perhaps
 the email equivalent of HTPP's 301/302 -- would be worth considering.
 Then, of course, there's problem of upgrading the $\aleph_0$ mail
 senders out there to comply...

See the 251 and 551 response codes first specified in RFC 788 section 3.2
and currently specified in RFC 5321 section 3.4. No-one implements them.

Tony.
-- 
f.anthony.n.finch  d...@dotat.at  http://dotat.at/
GERMAN BIGHT HUMBER: SOUTHWEST 5 TO 7. MODERATE OR ROUGH. SQUALLY SHOWERS.
MODERATE OR GOOD.



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Lyndon Nerenberg (VE6BBM/VE7TFX)
s...@cs.columbia.edu:
 I am seriously suggesting that a redirect mechanism -- perhaps the email 
 equivalent of HTPP's 301/302 -- would be worth considering.

We already have SMTP's 221 and 521 response codes for this. But because the
response text is free-form there's no way to reliably parse out the new address.

Fixing this is a bit tricky since the SMTP grammar defines Reply-line in
a way that makes it difficult to return the sort of structed response you
would need.

--lyndon




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 1:16 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg (VE6BBM/VE7TFX) wrote:
 s...@cs.columbia.edu:
 I am seriously suggesting that a redirect mechanism -- perhaps the email 
 equivalent of HTPP's 301/302 -- would be worth considering.
 
 We already have SMTP's 221 and 521 response codes for this. But because the
 response text is free-form there's no way to reliably parse out the new 
 address.
 
 Fixing this is a bit tricky since the SMTP grammar defines Reply-line in
 a way that makes it difficult to return the sort of structed response you
 would need.

I don't think I know the details of the law, but I would guess that
address portability does not imply the address you have reach is not
in service.  The new address is.

-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Mon, 22 Feb 2010 19:02:38 GMT, Michael Dillon said:
  Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's
  report here.
 
 Why on earth would you trust Gadi when you could trust me and some
 acquaintances at Google?
 http://translate.google.co.uk/translate?js=yprev=_thl=enie=UTF-8layout=1eotf=1u=http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3852744,00.htmlsl=autotl=en

And the first paragraph renders as:

If you switch to the Knesset's bill Ronit Tirosh, Internet subscribers will be
able to switch Internet providers in different email address and keep the
previous society, like mobility cellular

Good enough to follow the gist of it, but by the end of the first sentence,
I'm already seriously doubtful as to its ability to catch subtle nuances and
details - and nuances and details are critical here.

(To be fair, Google Translate *does* do a yeoman job of a mostly hopeless task.
It however still has its occasional hovercraft full of eels moments, usually
when the distinction between eels and kippers matters most. ;)





pgp09cK9mxVMr.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Hank Nussbacher

On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, Dorn Hetzel wrote:


I am sure the various carriers faced with the onset of Local Number
Portability and WLNP in this part of the world would have been happy to
escape with only forwarding phone calls for 3 months.

Alas, such was not their fate :)

I would watch out for this idea, it might actually catch on in various
places, warts and all...


Can IP number portability be far behind?  You think your routing tables 
are big now?!  Wait till you are mandated to carry /32s for IP number 
portability :-)


-Hank



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Steven Bellovin

On Feb 22, 2010, at 1:58 PM, Florian Weimer wrote:

 * Steven Bellovin:
 
 Right; I was not seriously suggesting that the DNS was the right
 spot for it.  I am seriously suggesting that a redirect mechanism --
 perhaps the email equivalent of HTPP's 301/302 -- would be worth
 considering.  Then, of course, there's problem of upgrading the
 $\aleph_0$ mail senders out there to comply...
 
 There's already SMTP support for this, see RFC 5321, section 3.4.
 This has been carried over from RFC 821, which already contain the
 251/551 response codes.

Thanks; I'd forgotten about those.
 
 However, this is still a public database for which you cannot charge
 access, so it's not the solution we're looking for.
 


--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb








Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Joel Jaeggli
Hank Nussbacher wrote:
 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, Dorn Hetzel wrote:
 
 I am sure the various carriers faced with the onset of Local Number
 Portability and WLNP in this part of the world would have been happy to
 escape with only forwarding phone calls for 3 months.

 Alas, such was not their fate :)

 I would watch out for this idea, it might actually catch on in various
 places, warts and all...
 
 Can IP number portability be far behind?  You think your routing tables
 are big now?!  Wait till you are mandated to carry /32s for IP number
 portability :-)

Don't need to harm the routing-table to do that, we have mobile-ip.



 -Hank
 



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Richard Barnes
Dude, think to the future -- /128s!


On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 3:03 PM, Hank Nussbacher h...@efes.iucc.ac.il wrote:
 On Mon, 22 Feb 2010, Dorn Hetzel wrote:

 I am sure the various carriers faced with the onset of Local Number
 Portability and WLNP in this part of the world would have been happy to
 escape with only forwarding phone calls for 3 months.

 Alas, such was not their fate :)

 I would watch out for this idea, it might actually catch on in various
 places, warts and all...

 Can IP number portability be far behind?  You think your routing tables are
 big now?!  Wait till you are mandated to carry /32s for IP number
 portability :-)

 -Hank





Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Fred Baker


On Feb 22, 2010, at 12:51 PM, Dave CROCKER wrote:

Per the followup comments on this, the domain owner might be able to  
do some things in domain name usage and IP Address assignment to  
mitigate this, the initial and on-going costs of getting this right  
and the likelihood of eliminating all blowback are problematic.



The thing to do is to send a note to the Knesset explaining this, and  
telling them that you plan to send them the bills.


http://www.ipinc.net/IPv4.GIF




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread James Hess
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:30 AM, Jeff Kell jeff-k...@utc.edu wrote:
 There's no way to do this without some underlying forwarding...  and

Forwarding SMTP traffic consumes major bandwidth resources
(potentially), as the number of 'ports' eventually increases, and
seems like a juicy target for many different types of potential
abuses.  There are major technical hurdles that should be considered,
otherwise ISPs  probably wouldn't care much to provide mailboxes,  and
instead: might simply recommend an overseas service (not subject to
the port rules)  for people who want e-mail.

Or include purchase of a domain name  in the price of getting e-mail
service, it's just another tax required due to government
regulations,  ISP/telephone/cable subscribers are already used to
those types of fees.When the end user purchases their own domain,
it's up to them to transfer their own domain name  and deal with all
the technical issues that entails.


Issues like: spam against forwarded addresses (impossible to reliably
implement SPF and other sending MTA based protections).   Possibility
of the porting mail server being blacklisted (interfering with
forwarding), having,  sketchy connectivity, or other  persistent
issues,  or  low message size limits  No more than a 500mb attachment
can be forwarded,  that might have been the reason the user switched
e-mail providers in the first place,  so they could receive  30gb
HD-DVD ISOs  their friends were e-mailing them.


Resolving the   destination address is what DNS is for,  not what SMTP
routing is for.
Perhaps there is...  Give every e-mail user a subdomain as in
examplemail...@examplemailbox.example.com

To  port an e-mail address,the   receiving ISP  then provides a
domain name server for the donor ISP  to publish as in...
mailbox.example.com IN  NStheirdns1.example2.com


Use  IN NS   subdelegation to the user's  new ISP.  This requires
the ISP to  plan for portability,  by designating  a subdomain for
each user,  and having DNS software that can handle (potentially)
hundreds of thousands of permanent mailbox records.

For authentication, to request a change,  make it be proven that the
request is coming from a legitimate authority of the host the  IN NS
 record points to.



Or else rewrite the SMTP specification to change how the SMTP server
is selected  for every single  e-mail transaction  (assuming the
internet community actually thinks this is worthwhile)

Instead of merely performing a lookup of MX against just the host
label (where MX exists),   bring in  Mailbox binding

As in  bring back RFC 883 MAILB:
qname=mail...@mx.example.comQTYPE=MAILB

after a successful response from a QTYPE=MX query.
If  NXDOMAIN  is returned  from MAILB then proceed to contact  the MX.
But if MR responses arereceived from the MAILB query,  then the
sending MTA should switch to the recipient destination as directed.

And repeat the MX and MAILB lookup process with the new destination...

But the  presence  of a MAILB  record  must  not imply that the e-mail
address likely exists. The absence must not imply the e-mail
address likely doesn't exist,   either

Otherwise spammers would be very happy.  ISPs must wildcard MAILBs
or have some very robust abuse-protections in DNS itself,   or
end-users would never want to use MAILB-based porting.


--
-J



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Robert Bonomi
 From nanog-bounces+bonomi=mail.r-bonomi@nanog.org  Mon Feb 22 09:10:55 
 2010
 Date: Mon, 22 Feb 2010 17:09:45 +0200
 From: Gadi Evron g...@linuxbox.org
 To: NANOG Operators Group na...@merit.edu
 Subject: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

 The email portability bill has just been approved by the Knesset's 
 committee for legislation, sending it on its way for the full 
 legislation process of the Israeli parliament.

 While many users own a free email account, many in Israel still make use 
 of their ISP's email service.

 According to this proposed bill, when a client transfers to a different 
 ISP the email address will optionally be his to take along, just like 
 mobile providers do today with phone numbers.

 This new legislation makes little technological sense, and will 
 certainly be a mess to handle operationally as well as beurocratically, 
 but it certainly is interesting, and at least the notion is beautiful.

Quick!  Somebody propose a snail-mail portability bill.  When a renter 
changes to a different landlord, his snail-mail address will be optionally
his  to take along, just like what is proposed for ISP clients.

 The proposed bill can be found here [Doc, Hebrew]:
 http://my.ynet.co.il/pic/computers/22022010/mail.doc

 Linked to from this ynet (leading Israeli news site) story, here:
 http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3852744,00.html

 I will update this as things evolve on my blog, here:
 http://gadievron.blogspot.com/

   Gadi.





Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Mon, 22 Feb 2010 19:35:10 CST, James Hess said:
 Resolving the   destination address is what DNS is for,  not what SMTP
 routing is for.

You think the situation is bad now, imagine if the X.400 ADMD= and PRMD=
had caught on. ;)




pgpR6neOmBgus.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread gordon b slater
On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 13:38 +1100, Mark Andrews wrote:
 In message 201002230227.o1n2radp021...@mail.r-bonomi.com, Robert Bonomi 
 write
 s:
  Quick!  Somebody propose a snail-mail portability bill.  When a renter 
  changes to a different landlord, his snail-mail address will be optionally
  his  to take along, just like what is proposed for ISP clients.
 
 You can pay for this redirection service if you want it.  Usually
 it is time limited and often not fully implemented.

But with snail-mail it usually ¬just works¬, uses existing proven
technology, provides a little extra revenue for the carriers, etc etc
etc

I just don't see any of the above happening with _this_ proposal.

Hmm, maybe 'proposal' isn't the correct word for it - by a long way.

I have a feeling it's going to be implemented in the following manner:

./great_idea.sh | bad_plan  /dev/null


Hey - maybe they should submit an RFC? :)

next up: State of Israel vs. SORBS et al.  ding-ding! 


Maybe I'm too pessimistic?


Gord






Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread John Levine
In article fddc4e5f9aeda526d68b236708b0d...@yyc.orthanc.ca you write:
s...@cs.columbia.edu:
 I am seriously suggesting that a redirect mechanism -- perhaps the
email equivalent of HTPP's 301/302 -- would be worth considering.

We already have SMTP's 221 and 521 response codes for this. But because the
response text is free-form there's no way to reliably parse out the new 
address.

Assuming you mean 251 and 551, the new address is in brackets making
it straightforward to parse.

There's the minor detail that nobody has, as far as I can tell, ever
implemented either, but the spec's there if you want it.

R's,
John



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Larry Sheldon
On 2/22/2010 10:38 PM, John Levine wrote:
 In article fddc4e5f9aeda526d68b236708b0d...@yyc.orthanc.ca you write:
 s...@cs.columbia.edu:
 I am seriously suggesting that a redirect mechanism -- perhaps the
 email equivalent of HTPP's 301/302 -- would be worth considering.

 We already have SMTP's 221 and 521 response codes for this. But because the
 response text is free-form there's no way to reliably parse out the new 
 address.
 
 Assuming you mean 251 and 551, the new address is in brackets making
 it straightforward to parse.
 
 There's the minor detail that nobody has, as far as I can tell, ever
 implemented either, but the spec's there if you want it.

When Somebody calls one of my portable telephone numbers, they don't
get a message telling them they have to call some other number.  The get
call progress tones.
-- 
Government big enough to supply everything you need is big enough to
take everything you have.

Remember:  The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.

Requiescas in pace o email
Ex turpi causa non oritur actio
Eppure si rinfresca

ICBM Targeting Information:  http://tinyurl.com/4sqczs
http://tinyurl.com/7tp8ml




Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread John Levine
Unfortunately the links cited are in Hebrew so I'm only going on Gadi's 
report here.

Google Translate is your friend.  Yes, even on MS Word documents
written in Hebrew.

R's,
John



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Dave CROCKER



On 2/22/2010 8:42 PM, Larry Sheldon wrote:

When Somebody calls one of my portable telephone numbers, they don't
get a message telling them they have to call some other number.  The get
call progress tones.



You are confusing what is presented to the end-user with what might be going on 
within the infrastructure service.


Call progress tones are the former and their primary goal is to keep the user 
happy, providing very constrained information.  Especially for mobile phones, 
there is often all sorts of forwarding signallying going on while you hear to tones.


In general, a core problem with the Knesset law is that it presumes something 
that is viable for the phone infrastructure is equally - or at least tolerably - 
viable in the email infrastructure.  Unfortunately, the details of the two are 
massively different in terms of architecture, service model, cost structures and 
operational skills.


d/

--

  Dave Crocker
  Brandenburg InternetWorking
  bbiw.net



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Steven Bellovin

On Feb 23, 2010, at 1:06 AM, gordon b slater wrote:

 
 On Mon, 2010-02-22 at 21:20 -0800, Dave CROCKER wrote:
 In general, a core problem with the Knesset law is that it presumes
 something 
 that is viable for the phone infrastructure is equally - or at least
 tolerably - 
 viable in the email infrastructure.  Unfortunately, the details of the
 two are 
 massively different in terms of architecture, service model, cost
 structures and 
 operational skills.
 
 Good point Dave; for the mobile phone industry, number portability is an
 endpoint thing - no harder to change than a field in a
 billing/accounting database (the SIM#, keeping it very simple here), for
 email its a WHOLE lot more. 
 

And who runs this database?

Local number portability requires a new database, one that didn't exist before, 
 It's run by a neutral party and maps any phone number to a carrier and 
endpoint identifier.  (In the US, that database is currently run by Neustar -- 
see http://www.neustar.biz/solutions/solutions-for/number-administration)

Figuring out how such a solution would work with email is left as an exercise 
for the reader.

--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb








Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Jim Mercer
On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 11:08:54AM -0500, James Jones wrote:
 On Mon, Feb 22, 2010 at 10:09 AM, Gadi Evron g...@linuxbox.org wrote:
  According to this proposed bill, when a client transfers to a different ISP
  the email address will optionally be his to take along, just like mobile
  providers do today with phone numbers.
 
 Why does this seem like a really bad idea?

actually, i think its a great idea.

now the ISPs will have an actual interest in shutting down and eliminating
SPAM, as it would make little economic sense to be forwarding huge amounts of
email around when the bulk of it is just gonna be discarded anyways.

( i'm half joking )

-- 
Jim Mercerj...@reptiles.org+92 336 520-4504
I'm Prime Minister of Canada, I live here and I'm going to take a leak.
   - Lester Pearson in 1967, during a meeting between himself and
President Lyndon Johnson, whose Secret Service detail had taken over
Pearson's cottage retreat.  At one point, a Johnson guard asked
Pearson, Who are you and where are you going?



Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Barry Shein

  My initial reaction: Does the law in any way imply this mail address
  has to be provided for free?
  
  If you had spent 10 seconds with Google Translate on the URL in Gadi's
  message, you'd already know.

(gosh that only took 12 hours to suggest)

Obviously we're discussing a legal and regulatory system most of us
here are unfamiliar with, there may be other considerations.

But in the USofA a law like this would raise some serious trademark
issues.

When you manage a valuable trademark your lawyer lectures you about
how a trademark has to represent a particular product of a particular
quality or else a court can deem it invalid or even fraudulent.

There are only two ways this sort of law is likely to be implemented:

  a) The original ISP continues to provide email for that address.

  b) Some other ISP provides that service.

I suppose a third way, via a third party, is possible but I don't
think that defuses the trademark issue.

The exact mechanics are a different discussion.

Since the first ISP is no longer being paid the practical solution
seems to be (b), the original ISP cooperates and hands over service to
the new provider somehow.

But how can the original ISP be assured that email going out under
what appears to be their mark (consider x...@aol.com or x...@msn.com)
represents their product in any way the law requires?

It would be a conflict and a potential dilution of one's mark.

Particularly, as others have suggested, if that product implies
availability, spam filtering, support, storage, recovery in the event
of lost storage, TOS, etc.

In contrast, a phone number has no such trademark implications for the
provider, one generally doesn't say oh, 555-555-1234, an ATT phone
number! Perhaps it's possible to know this, but it's not common
knowledge, it doesn't generally represent the public's view of the
ATT mark.

I don't think the law would be workable in the US.

I'd be surprised if the law doesn't run into similar problems in
Israel.


-- 
-Barry Shein

The World  | b...@theworld.com   | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 800-THE-WRLD| Dial-Up: US, PR, Canada
Software Tool  Die| Public Access Internet | SINCE 1989 *oo*



RE: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee

2010-02-22 Thread Mark Scholten


 -Original Message-
 From: Barry Shein [mailto:b...@world.std.com]
 Sent: Tuesday, February 23, 2010 7:55 AM
 To: John Levine
 Cc: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Email Portability Approved by Knesset Committee
 
 
   My initial reaction: Does the law in any way imply this mail
 address
   has to be provided for free?
  
   If you had spent 10 seconds with Google Translate on the URL in
 Gadi's
   message, you'd already know.
 
 (gosh that only took 12 hours to suggest)
 
 Obviously we're discussing a legal and regulatory system most of us
 here are unfamiliar with, there may be other considerations.
 
 But in the USofA a law like this would raise some serious trademark
 issues.
 
 When you manage a valuable trademark your lawyer lectures you about
 how a trademark has to represent a particular product of a particular
 quality or else a court can deem it invalid or even fraudulent.
 
 There are only two ways this sort of law is likely to be implemented:
 
   a) The original ISP continues to provide email for that address.
 
   b) Some other ISP provides that service.
 
 I suppose a third way, via a third party, is possible but I don't
 think that defuses the trademark issue.
 
 The exact mechanics are a different discussion.
 
 Since the first ISP is no longer being paid the practical solution
 seems to be (b), the original ISP cooperates and hands over service to
 the new provider somehow.
 
 But how can the original ISP be assured that email going out under
 what appears to be their mark (consider x...@aol.com or x...@msn.com)
 represents their product in any way the law requires?
 
And now think about it with SPF records (and checks for SPF records). All
outgoing mail should also go via the OLD provider. Including domainnames
(for email) would be the solution for this. In other cases only (a) seems to
be available. Maybe a payment between the old and new provider is the
solution for it. How to do this if the old provider is stopping? It is a
realistic possibility that they stop.
 It would be a conflict and a potential dilution of one's mark.
 
 Particularly, as others have suggested, if that product implies
 availability, spam filtering, support, storage, recovery in the event
 of lost storage, TOS, etc.
Just mention that this law is above the other law regarding Trademarks and
you will need to follow this law. What if a domain get listed because a new
provider doesn't use a spam filter on outgoing messages, how to get delisted
for the old provider? Some lists might be based on the from header in
emails.
 
 In contrast, a phone number has no such trademark implications for the
 provider, one generally doesn't say oh, 555-555-1234, an ATT phone
 number! Perhaps it's possible to know this, but it's not common
 knowledge, it doesn't generally represent the public's view of the
 ATT mark.
 
 I don't think the law would be workable in the US.
 
 I'd be surprised if the law doesn't run into similar problems in
 Israel.
 
Regards,
Mark