In message <199408081502.IAA08127@jobe.shell.portal.com> Hal writes:
You need not pass over the 'flaw of lack of message quantization in the final sending'. Someone running a private high security gateway, an "empowered user", participates in the same way as the other RemailerNet gateways, and there is in fact no way to determine even whether he is sending or receiving, or in fact whether he is doing anything at all. He may be just sending and receiving noise packets.
Users accessing the net using low security versions of the software do have less security, but that is a consequence of their use of low security software.
I could see this would come up in Jim's description. Who exactly are these "empowered users"? And how much security do the second-class citizens ac- tually get? Will it work for everyone to become "empowered", or are there scaling problems in terms of bandwidth?
It seems to me that the most sensible approach is to make message fragmen- tation into standard-sized packets, along with reassembly, be at the end user site. This way everyone becomes a first-class citizen.
I think that you want at least three levels in this system, with increasingly strong requirements as you go up the levels and (necessarily) increasingly weak security as you go down. You should be able to pop messages into the system from any terminal anywhere, just using ordinary email. But you should also be able to casually dump a few hundred megabytes into the system without making too big a splash, if you have the right equipment. Ideally, the empowered user's (your term, yes?) system is functionally a gateway, but it has a nice front end on it, something like Mosaic. It is probably a single user system with a RemailerNet interface bolted on to it; it probably runs under Windows; it may even be a modified version of Mosaic. The system at the next level up is a workhorse. Its user interface would be a system manager's, designed to show him how traffic is flowing, highlighting bottlenecks, etc. It would be designed to run automatically. -- Jim Dixon