Perry: You are right that because of the right free speach, it is impossible to prohibit remailers. However, while I don't believe in prior restraint; but I do believe in personal responsibility. It is certainly true that it is possible to construct a remailer service, using cryptography, such that it would be impossible to trace it back to the original sender. This class of remailer would generally not provide a return address mapping feature, since if the remailer can generate a return path, it can be revealed. There are ways to make it more difficult to reveal, but they still don't make it impossible. So Julf's remailer doesn't fall into this category, but ones where the input and output mappings are destroyed immediately do. So in this model, how can you provide personal responsibility? Well, I would argue that the buck should stop at the remailer site. They are the closest link to the chain of liability, and they have intentionally performed measures which make it impossible find the next link in the chain of liability. So, let the liability rest with the remailer site! Now, I'm not a lawyer, and as far as I know, this legal theory hasn't been tested in a court. So only time will tell what happens when these remailers hit the real world. As far as remailers like Julf's are concerned, I very much like the idea which Tim Moors suggested --- which is to have some method which the identity between the input and output address could be revealed. This provides general anonymity, but one that can be breached when someone has abused that anonymity, as convicted by a jury of their peers. Perhaps the way this could be reflected into the "real world" legal system is that remailers which do keep a mapping between input and output addresses, and which are willing to reveal them under appropriate circumstances, would be exempt from being held liable for what comes out of their remailer. Perhaps these are not the right sets of tools to be used to provide some sort of controls over remailers so that the negative effects of these remailers can be controlled. But it is our responsibility to consider them, and not just pretend they don't exist. I hope we don't have the attitude of "Vonce the rockets go up, who cares vere they come down? That's not my department....." - Ted