
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- At 02:38 PM 4/9/96 -0400, Perry E. Metzger wrote:
The internet and the culture are coming into conflict in a big way, and I don't believe that both of them can survive.
Perry
Well this is as good a time and place as any to ask the question that none of the opposition seems to have asked (perhaps because they don't know enough to ask): How do you force geographically dispersed nodes on a distributed network to adopt a set of officially mandated protocols? But first a reading assignment: "How Anarchy Works--Inside the Internet Engineering Task Force" from Wired. http://www.hotwired.com/wired/3.10/departments/electrosphere/ietf.html So, now we know that the IETF has been pretty successful as a means of standards setting. We then have to go on to discuss how The Great Enemy might undertake to intervene in this process. Questions: 1) Are there any official agencies currently involved in drafting substitute protocols? 2) Do the public employees on the IETF behave any differently from the private employees? 3) Do the world's governments have the programming talent? 4) Do the world's governments have a way to get users at all levels to adopt their protocols? I don't know the answer to these questions. We know that governments would like to impose things like the Simple Tax Transfer Protocol on the Net as well as Is A Person (and Is A Minor) Protocols. The Heathen Chinee have proposed their own entry into the protocol design process as have many of the other governments. Do they have any idea yet how to go about it? Do we? DCF -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBMWu7OYVO4r4sgSPhAQFw8wP/SONzr+vOKaIw3NQPTF4o1xk4hVFrlWEs y5fLcrh2jHlejPMvdoTNJIvZ0nsgLNJU8QsW+goRzl9B37/8U9oG8A0CgvOu9Wr9 2aP+zkHjTYldvtGuOWXNoq7tdQDGY5cGzMTJZO0WRwMBhpO+BnOGPPN2MqxMOPIK vbIgly4DEI8= =57wn -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----