How do you get around the possibility that the Fed will simply look up the IP address of the APst AP website via DNS, find out who the ISP is, and make the ISP give up the name of the person being billed for the server's access? The naming scheme used isn't DNS, it's a Fling based hierarchical-naming scheme that just looks very similar to DNS from a nontechnical users point of view. It looks up "route balls" (the technique used to untraceably set up a data stream) rather than IP addresses. it's also based on a "peer-to-peer root plane" rather than the single (coercible, corruptable, unsubtle) primary root that DNS uses. Making the IP adress unfindable is a primary goal of Fling. Speech without limits Fling is a new suite of internet protocols that perform the function of DNS, TCP, and UDP in a manner that's both untraceable and untappable. Fling protects clients from servers, servers from clients, and both from an eavesdropper in-between. The result is that anyone can serve or retrieve any data, without fear of censure. [1]http://fling.sourceforge.net/wiki/ References 1. http://fling.sourceforge.net/wiki/