ietf-openproxy
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applications additions

2004-12-15 03:13:12

I will list a few other applications I do not know if I quoted them:

- filtering on language tag basis - tags are presently discussed for a revision of the RFC 3066.

- filtering for externet confinement. Externet is a notion I work on as part of the probable (old) future of the nets: it is the virtual network of my vision of a part of the network (the extenal IPs, names, tags, etc. I accept to relate with).

- semantic web support. I can use external information to amalgamate them with the mail content. This is a general OPES capacity I think we should discuss with the W3C, since OPES and OCP could be the core of an automated underlaying semantic web. Obviously this is more a ONES architecture (my old open network extended services) as it has to initiate the process, or if triggered by a cron it is not an end to end action. But we could fake an OPES for the IAB. Let conceive the following architecture:

1. I have a web site made of structured pages of information I want to update in using a semantic web approach.
  2. I send _myself_ mails, each mails being the content of the site pages.
3. on the mail path the "SMTP/OPES" (whatever it may mean) works on the mails to update them from all the related semantic web sites. 4. I receive the mails and once all of them are updated I use their content to update the site.

The advantage of SMTP over HTTP and a Webservice is that everything is quite built-in (I can write a perl script to send and receive in less than an hour), that the it is asynchronous (so it may accept delays, machine being downs, store all the data before the last mail triggers the rebuild process, etc.), that it has a built-in duplication solution (so I may maintain many sites one shot), that with additional OPES features I can trace the process, I can charge for it, etc.

- in the same vein using a similar "send myself a question for it to come back with an answer" I can easily build information services, with broadcasts to everyone concerned. For example, in a working group, I have a question of common interest: I can send the group a question, the SMTP/OPES will exfilter, respond from semantic web or a database, fill into the mail. So the group receives the reply to my query.

- multilingual/anonymized mails. The mail header is modified so the origin, destinees, etc. can be written in a scripting and received in another scripting.

- incrementing counters to charge for mails (mail toll or stamp.s) at gateways, etc. There is only a small filter interacting with the OPES server, so the cost can be very low.

- triggering alarms. When a mail I am waiting for is delivered, I receive an SMS.

- third party notarization. A recent FCC case shows the need. They fined a network for an indecent show (if I am correct a singer had an incident [pretented on purpose] and shown her breasts). It said it had received 129 e-mail complaints. An audit shown it had received only 23 including 20 copies of the same 3 mails. An "SMPT/OPES" could be easily devised to report on the number of really different mails received by an authority. The interest of the OPES is that the content can be verified on a secure server.

- mail tapping. Obviously this is the same as mail tapping by police. The ISP may be easily asked by a Judge to tapp the mails of a customer just in turning on/off an OPES.

- I suppose I quoted it before, but an SMTP/OPES can provide encryption of regular mails and scrambling (for example setting up an "ISP rotation" it may send crypted bits of mails through several ISP/mails and rebuild tghe mail on arrival)

etc.

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