
Date: Mon, 1 Mar 93 17:44:23 -0800 From: Eric Hughes <hughes@soda.berkeley.edu>
There doesn't seem to be a lot of realism in these discussions, which is really bothering me.
What you believe to be real and what I believe to be real may be different. To claim that another is being unrealistic is to mask what is foremost a difference in belief. What assumptions here do you disagree with? If you are explicit, perhaps we can forge an agreement. Well, let's see.... the most recent assumption I disagreed with was the claim that we could implement full-fledged postive reputation filters, complete with the use of RSA, and deploy it on the Usenet in some sort of time-frame less than ten years out --- and even that is doubtful. Look at how many sites are running B News, long after C news has been out. Anonymous remailers are here *today*. Then there's assumption that anonymous ID's would automatically have no weight --- they may have very little weight, but even today, they probably have some weight. I could probably construct some sort of NSA conspiracy theory, and have it posted so it looked like it came from 20 different pseudonyms, and it probably would be believed by a lot of people. Fundamentally, however, there's the basic assumption that anarchy per se is good; which is a basic philosophical belief which I just plain disagree with. I have strong Libertarian leanings, although I don't necessarily believe in the Libertarian party --- however, complete and total anarchy goes far beyond what I believe is a reasonable or realistic way to run a society; that's basically a "might makes right" form of government. In cyberspace, most of the people on this list would probably be listed among the mighty: we understand computers, and cryptography, and how to use them, "much better than the average bear". So it is not surprising that there are many on this list who think crypto anarchy is a good thing; however, I am not convinced that this would be a terribly just or better society than what we have now --- the only difference which class of people would be in power. In any case, a basic assumption which seems to permeate the arguments made by various people on this list is that anarchy is good. Perhaps I am running away from an argument, but in my experience, it is rare that an argument with a religious fanatic bears any fruit, and it seems that there are people who such militant anarchists that futher discussion doesn't seem to have much of a point. How does that saying go? "Don't bother trying to teach a pig to sing. It just frustrates you, and annoys the pig." - Ted