At 06:38 PM 06/22/2002 -0400, Steve Fulton wrote:
At 17:37 22/06/2002 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not arguing, but the hardware cost curve for storage has a shorter
halving time than the cost curve for CPU (Moore's Law) and the
corresponding halving time for bandwidth is shorter still.
At 18:57 21/06/2002 -0700, John Young wrote:
Data retention is being done now by programs and services
which cache data to ease loading on servers and networks.
[...]
John,
As a systems administrator @ an ISP, I can tell flat out that the software
you describe has nothing to do with ISP
Steve,
Not arguing, but the hardware cost curve for storage has a shorter
halving time than the cost curve for CPU (Moore's Law) and the
corresponding halving time for bandwidth is shorter still.
If that relationship holds up over a period of years, today's
tradeoffs between cache,
At 17:37 22/06/2002 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Not arguing, but the hardware cost curve for storage has a shorter
halving time than the cost curve for CPU (Moore's Law) and the
corresponding halving time for bandwidth is shorter still.
You've got a point. Storage is becoming less and less
I appreciate what an honorable ISP admin will do to abide customer
rights over intrusive snoopers and perhaps cooperative administrators
above the pay grade of a sysadmin. Know that a decent sysadmin is on
for about 1/3 of a weekday for 24x7 systems is a small comfort but
leaves unanswered what
Under this proposed law, will ISPs have to scan *all* SMTP traffic and
record the envelope, or only the traffic for which they actually do
SMTP forwarding? If the latter is the case, we can simply go back to
the original end-to-end SMTP delivery model; no POP/IMAP or any of
that stuff. If the
AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'; '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: Re: DOJ proposes US data-rentention law.
Trei, Peter wrote:
- start quote -
Cyber Security Plan Contemplates U.S. Data Retention Law
http://online.securityfocus.com/news/486
Internet service
ji wrote:
Under this proposed law, will ISPs have to scan *all* SMTP
traffic and record the envelope, or only the traffic for
which they actually do
SMTP forwarding? If the latter is the case, we can simply go
back to the original end-to-end SMTP delivery model; no
POP/IMAP or any of
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], David G. Koontz writes:
Trei, Peter wrote:
- start quote -
Cyber Security Plan Contemplates U.S. Data Retention Law
http://online.securityfocus.com/news/486
Internet service providers may be forced into wholesale spying
on their customers as part of the