At 10:28 AM 3/22/2004, Barry Shein wrote:
On March 21, 2004 at 15:10 mbaugher(_at_)cisco(_dot_)com (Mark Baugher) wrote:
>
> If we get forgery under control, then it is possible to apply reputation,
> accreditation, blacklisting and other techniques to manage spam. What
am I
> missing?
That the USPS (and no doubt others) haven't been able to make much of
a dent in this in 200+ years?
ietf-mxcomp is addressing this issue.
Mark
There's a paradox here. Authentication etc costs money, even if just
microcents it adds up in some contexts. People want e-mail to be
essentially free.
I think we can probably find ways to prevent people from bringing fork
lifts into the all you can eat buffet. But fraud and authentication in
general is a huge topic which probably is best solved by someone
figuring out a model for a "charging for authentication business",
akin to registered or certified mail.
Put another way, it's one of those problems that seems to be easy on a
very small scale (exchange PGP keys with your friends), but becomes
very hard as you scale it up, particularly if the first criteria is
that it must not cost anything.
-b
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