Cascading aliases
I think Matthew Rapaport's point is good that much of the trouble with the automatic assignment of aliases comes from the automatic mailing to the user of a new alias. Most of the remailing servers have a special address or command you can send meaning "assign me a new alias, and tell me what it is". Probably, as Matthew says, they should only mail back the newly assigned alias when one of these special commands is used. I'm still not convinced that automatic alias assignment should always be done when mail goes through a server from a new address. It seems like this might generate so many aliases that it would be too great a load on the servers, especially if remailers become more widely used. But it's hard to say how bad a problem this is. I feel that the main purpose of an anonymous address is to protect the anonymity of the person being addressed, not people who send to him. Just because a person chooses to be anonymous is no reason to expect that everyone who wants to talk to him also wants to be anonymous. I think it would be better to only provide anonymity when asked. Systems that do too much for people sometimes get in the way. Hal Finney 74076.1041@compuserve.com Distribution: Cypherpunks >INTERNET:cypherpunks@toad.com
Hal Finney writes:
I feel that the main purpose of an anonymous address is to protect the anonymity of the person being addressed, not people who send to him. Just because a person chooses to be anonymous is no reason to expect that everyone who wants to talk to him also wants to be anonymous. I think it would be better to only provide anonymity when asked. Systems that do too much for people sometimes get in the way.
Well, yeeeeesss... but.... It all depends on the intended target audience. If our users are pretty sophisticated netfreaks, I agree that the philosophy of the system ought to be "only do what the user asks for". But if the users are non-computer-literate people, seeking a source of support and understanding in this vast mess of e-mail and netnews, I feel they need and deserve all the hand-holding and safety switches the software can provide. So it seems there is room and need for *different* remailers. Julf
I suspect that a ID creating forwarder should _never_ send the ID to the user, as someone might be looking (both the current plain text replys and traffic analsys are problems). If the user wishes to know their ID then they can send a message to themselvs, and read the ID off of that, right? ||ugh Daniel
participants (3)
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Hal
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hugh@domingo.teracons.com
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Johan Helsingius