After a period of not using them much, I just tried several of the remailers listed in the various summaries by Karl Barrus and Xenon, and the ad hoc "foo is up again" sorts of messages. The results were disappointing. One remailer I used to use quite a bit no longer seems to be working at all, and others still haven't responded to my ping. Couple this with other problems: * one of the hacktic.nl remailers was announced (in a newsgroup) as going offline because the owner of the laptop (!) it ran on was going to Spain for a few months. * other remailers have gone up, down, and sideways...with little warning or "persistence." * the "finger" command that was supposed to at one point provide a fairly current summary, never worked for me. (Sorry, I can't find this finger report, but the idea was that one would "finger foo@bar.baz" and a recent ping of the existing remailers would be returned. I tried it several times, but the results were clearly wrong.) * I know about both Matthew Ghio's ping program and Xenon's SuperPing script, but these are both cumbersome to set up and use and will not exactly make remailer use widespread. * What I suspect many of us do is to find a remailer that works, that we get comfortable with, and then use that. This is OK for very low-grade, casual use, but only for that. And, as I just found out, when that system vanishes, changes, or otherwise no longer works.... Caveat: I'm not pointing fingers (literally), and I appreciate the work that has gone into remailers, and the not ignorable personal risk that remailer operators have incurred. And I am not volunteering others for more work. But it is certainly fair to comment on the implications of this state of affairs, right? * The ad hoc, "it'll be up if I remembered to plug in the modem" nature of _some_ remailers is not conducive to wide use, especially in chains. * Experimentation is useful, for new features or for folks just starting out in the remailer business, but not for stable, longterm, widespread use. (Maybe we need to have the remailers refect their experimental, developmental, and production status with some sort of identifying mark. For example "remailer-X@foo.bar" could signify an experimental remailer, and "remailer-P@foo.bar" could then signify that the remailer is ostensibly "open for business" as a quasi-commercial, stable remailer. Just an idea. Ultimately, I favor external reputation raters/testers, and this idea is just intended to encourage people who _know_ their remailers are "experimental" (read: flaky) to label them clearly as such.) * Some sort of "reputation" rating, with %availability, would be useful. Something like: remailer@foo.bar 37 successes in 41 tries over 131 days 11 successes in 11 tries in last 15 days average delay: 3.1 min (including all overhead) supports: PGP 2.3a, 2.4, delays, subject line remailer@loser.org 3 successes in 39 tries in 128 days 0 successes in 11 tries in last 15 days average delay: 47 min (including all overhead) I will be willing to pay about $10 a year, real money, for someone who will set this up, reasonably robustly, and then mail me the results on a daily or weekly basis. (Such a pinging service should be done, I think, on at least a daily basis, possibly even more frequently, with statistics compiled about delays, percentage of hits and misses, etc.) This "Daily Remailing Form" would be an obvious thing to sell: it represents value, is of relevance to Cypherpunks, and can be bought with real money (or with Magic Money thingamajigs, at the discretion of the seller). It might be "better" for the "rest of us" if this service were free, as with the finger ping that was to exist at one point, but this free service fails to incentivize the creator to really make his service reliable and robust. * Digital postage is an even more-ideal solution, strongly incentivizing remailers to keep their systems running. I and others have written about this extensively, so I won't here. Just some comments. --Tim May -- .......................................................................... Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@netcom.com | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero 408-688-5409 | knowledge, reputations, information markets, W.A.S.T.E.: Aptos, CA | black markets, collapse of governments. Higher Power: 2^859433 | Public Key: PGP and MailSafe available. "National borders are just speed bumps on the information superhighway."