ietf-asrg
[Top] [All Lists]

RE: [Asrg] Spam, defined, and permissions

2004-12-28 06:19:32
-----Original Message-----
From: asrg-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org 
[mailto:asrg-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org]On Behalf Of
Laird Breyer
Sent: Tuesday, December 28, 2004 1:59 AM
To: asrg(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org
Subject: Re: [Asrg] Spam, defined, and permissions


On Dec 27 2004, Hannigan, Martin wrote:

What bothers me here with your approach is that you're 
not attacking
the spam problem, you're attacking the user apathy problem and
*hoping* that this will somehow solve the spam problem. 
But there's no
guidance as to what users will or should do if they wake up 
from their 
apathy. 

Everything that has been done to date is a massive failure.

It's either too difficult for the average end user, or too expensive
for the N/ISP to implement, or, has not gained the trust of 
major networks.

I'm confused. Are you looking for a single, one size fits all 
solution?

There is no single solution. SPAM is never going to go away in it's
entirety. If you can minimize it where you can actually measure it
accurately, you can educate people to handle the rest.

It seems to me that the problems faced by ISPs are quite 
different than 
the problems faced by end-users or the problems faced by major webmail
providers. 

Not really. Internet services are from the bottom up, and the funding of
those products/services is top down. The users major problem is always
the ISP's major problem. Major problem impacts call centers, sales,
operations,
usage, capacity models, etc.


I believe my criticism is valid, but if I am looking at things too
simplistically, please enlighten me: The charging model is 
intended to 
push the problem from the ISPs to the end users. End users who don't
do their bit to fix the spam problem are priced out of the network.

No. It's a mechanism to substantially reduce the amount. SPAM will never
be stopped in it's entirety.


But pricing doesn't tell the users just what they are supposed to do
under this scheme. There's the nebulous idea of "keep your PC zombie
free".

The users aren't supposed to have to do anything.


I made an analogy with global blacklists, which I think work on the
same principle.  ISPs harbouring spammers are censored out of the SMTP
network, but how they are supposed to keep their userlists spammer
free is nebulous.

As long as you don't need to communicate with comcast, MCI, or AOL, I guess
that works.

Presumably, email is such a vital resource that end users who are
priced out of the mail network will do everything possible to return
to it, and that will somehow acts as a kind of breeding ground for a
true solution to the zombie problem. Perhaps that can truly happen, I
don't know.

Youre fantasizing "War of The eWorlds". I'm suggesting a cap on current
services so that any obvious overuse (spam?) is paid for - which in turn
drives entities to act by either a.de-zombify or b. not sending
junk mail - because it's not cost effective ie. comcast charges a commercial
rate for the line, a fee over the cap, a higher cost plan, etc. 


I imagine that the same hackers who gave us P2P will find a way to
send email transparently, without necessarily using the existing email
network. Then we'll have two email networks, a free one and a 
metered one.

Grasping at straws. There is NO SUCH THING as a free network. This
is 2004. In 1994 there was the appearance of free, but univerisities
bore the brunt of the "cost" for "free".

You can only say "get another ISP" for so long and it becomes
a clear indicator of your level of understanding of the problem
itself, the mechanics, and the history. 

So long as ISPs don't collude, competitive pressures cannot 
be discounted. 


We can't control this. Noone can. That's called 'market forces'.

-M<

_______________________________________________
Asrg mailing list
Asrg(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org
https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/asrg