Re: Why Digital Cash...
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Well I'm bummed, my earlier post on this seems to have been totally ignored. I will shorten it. Tim May asks some interesting questions about the pace of crypto deployment, and asks about "compensating" people for their work. OBSTACLES I think there are two main reasons for slow deployment: 1. Lack of resources To really do it right, you must own a net connected machine. - digital bank: speed, convenience - data havens: speed, convenience, access to huge storage - anonymous remailers: need to be able to control sendmail logging, need to be able to hack config files for best results, etc. Owning the machine this stuff runs on (no other users) is necessary for key security. For guarding against what Tim calls "Mom and Pop" type remailers (ones that may vanish at anytime when a student graduates, moves, etc.) 2. Legal issues In my mind, the biggest hurdle. - patents: these may really suck but the fact is they are legal until a court overturns them, or they expire ;) - exposure: the operator assumes a certain (almost unpredictable) risk. For example: * suppose I run a data haven and people use it for moving pirated software. * suppose somebody uses an anonymous remailer to threaten another Call me nuts, but the fact that many remailers run on systems that do log mail is "protection" for the remailer operator. A balance needs to be struck between offering anonymous mail and logging; unfortunately I think in the current climate the balance lies closer to logging to avoid problems. Don't get me wrong, I'm in favor of this technology (I've run remailers, etc.). But the "infrastructure" to deal with some events isn't here. (Say somebody gets threatening anonymous mail. In a world rich with crypto tools, this person would be using positive reputation filters, ignoring mail not digitally signed, maybe even be posting to usenet or participating in an email list "anonymously" themselves with return address blocks, etc. In this case, their identity could be kept completely private.) INCENTIVES What are the incentives for running these services? None as far as I can tell, other than the satisfaction of doing it. I'm not sure the market is ready for anonymous mail, data havens, etc. So it falls to interested hobbyists to experiment with. Johan Helsingus (Julf of anon.penet.fi) spends hours a day maintaining his site, responding to complaints, etc. He provides a valuable service, which obviously is very popular... all the same, I'll bet when he asked for a donation of $5 per account to help defray costs, he got almost no response.
Later protocols have not fared as well. Why this is so is of great importance.
I'm very interested in hearing your theories about this, Tim. Post! I too wish things were different. We are in a "ease of use" phase. Most people on this list don't even pgp sign their messages, largely because it isn't convenient. It isn't surprising later protocols aren't faring well. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.3a iQCVAgUBLdAqdIOA7OpLWtYzAQFrzgP+Mtrvyq+aG0pIX57t/bJ+L1dsbO+tnf3O orcr8ZytlNWFfaoxDVf33780FCRFHsP06xOmXRiGM14bWrIVKbq+D9y4pvx8Qh/6 4YEND80DWooALAK8Meo4gKJgc5EPXcsGgW9/JvfjP46VG2kq7vcAQoKGH9HZe4c7 W+0I3cpteQg= =sLe4 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
"Nobody" writes:
Well I'm bummed, my earlier post on this seems to have been totally ignored. I will shorten it.
I saw it and thought it quite good. As to why nobody (besides Nobody, of course) commented.... I wrote an essay on how the "bad posts drive out the good," that is, the trivial chatter and net.repartee posts tend to dominate over the thoughtful, detailed reports. I sent this around 5 p.m., PDT, on Saturday, so it no doubt vanished into the Maximal Entropy empty set. (However, being anal retentive, I saved a copy...I will resubmit it when the readership gets back to a high enough level.)
Owning the machine this stuff runs on (no other users) is necessary for key security. For guarding against what Tim calls "Mom and Pop" type remailers (ones that may vanish at anytime when a student graduates, moves, etc.)
Actually, these are not what I mean by "Mom and Pop remailers." My usage here is that someday there will be the infrastructure to support local entrepreneurial services, wherein households (hence "Mom and Pop") set up remailer services and collect digital postage. Far from being flaky (the "Joe College remailers." one might call them), these remailers-for-pay would need to be counted on to be up, and could not afford to be flaky. O'Reilly and Associates (the Unix books people) are about to unveil their "Internet-in-a-box" product. Can it be much longer before some of you enterprising remailer builders offer "Remailer-in-a-box"?
- exposure: the operator assumes a certain (almost unpredictable) risk. For example: * suppose I run a data haven and people use it for moving pirated software. * suppose somebody uses an anonymous remailer to threaten another
This apparently is happening. Offshore remailers will help, but a malicious person planning a denial of service attack can still send threats, pirated software, etc., through a remailer he want to put heat on.
Don't get me wrong, I'm in favor of this technology (I've run remailers, etc.). But the "infrastructure" to deal with some events isn't here.
Agreed. But the infrastructure won't exist until some experiments have been done and evolutionary learning takes place. A platitude perhaps, but still the truth.
What are the incentives for running these services? None as far as I can tell, other than the satisfaction of doing it. I'm not sure the market is ready for anonymous mail, data havens, etc. So it falls to interested hobbyists to experiment with.
Longterm (as short as 2 years perhaps, but more likely 5-10 years...an eyeblink, as I see it) the incentive is as with *any other service*. Just like Federal Express or UPS. "Digital postage" of some form.
Johan Helsingus (Julf of anon.penet.fi) spends hours a day maintaining his site, responding to complaints, etc. He provides a valuable service, which obviously is very popular... all the same, I'll bet when he asked for a donation of $5 per account to help defray costs, he got almost no response.
A variant of the "tragedy of the commons," of course. All users benefit, regardless of contributions. For now, Julf is presumably deriving psychic satisfaction (fame, notoriety, happiness at perhaps helping people in the *.recovery "confession" groups, etc.). He sometimes comments here, so perhaps he will now. When there is a need for some service, and the means to make that service happen, and the economic incentives, the service usually gets provided. I'm not too worried about "making it happen," myself. Only in doing what I can to head-off any restrictive moves by governments. I'm pretty hopeful. Strong crypto + wide-open communications = this future we talk about. Whatever form remailers take, it's probably too late to stop them. --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."
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