I read this the other day and had the usual knee-jerk reaction that someone was once again trying to claim ownership to part of the Internet and we should resist it. But then I thought better of it. Spam is so out of control that I find myself accidently deleting legit e-mails rather than wade through the hundreds of junk e-mails I get each day. The anti-spam legislation obviously hasn't worked because most of them just changed where it's sent from. Most of my junk now lists Euro domains but my guess is it's still the same old slimey crew of Americans just circumventing the law. Something has to be done and at least Gates is proposing a strategy that isn't going to cost you anything except a little computing power.
Instead of paying a penny, the sender would "buy" postage by devoting maybe 10 seconds of computing time to solving a math puzzle. The exercise would merely serve as proof of the sender's good faith.
That sounds like an okay idea, but how would you do that without somehow replacing every E-mail program out there with new ones? The server does that calcs? That would just slow down the server, not the mailing computer.
Instead of paying a penny, the sender would "buy" postage by devoting maybe 10 seconds of computing time to solving a math puzzle. The exercise would merely serve as proof of the sender's good faith.
That sounds like an okay idea, but how would you do that without somehow replacing every E-mail program out there with new ones? The server does that calcs? That would just slow down the server, not the mailing computer.
Wouldn't that essentianly turn e-mail into just a slightly quicker version of snail mail? Or would that mean that everytime I wanted to forward something funny to my friends, my own PC would bog down for 10 seconds for everyone I sent the email to? People with outdated PC's would be fuxored.
And what kind of "math puzzle" would it be? Who would be the beneficiary of my PC's time? Seems like Gates has found a new way to cut labor costs.
How many of you actually read the article before you started complaining?
I actually like the idea, though I think it needs some work -- essentially, that you have to compute some fraction of a SETI unit or some other mathematical calculation, and that by doing so, you earn the ability to send some e-mails. As long as it's easy to earn a hundred e-mails but prohibitive to earn a million e-mails, I think it's a good idea.
Implementation, of course, is a hard question. You have to answer questions like
- is verification done at the server level, or at the ISP level, or what? (In other words, could spammers just set up an SMTP server? Would they need to infiltrate an ISP?)
- would there be exemptions if one could demonstrate they had a legitimate business license and a legitimate purpose for sending masses of e-mail? (For example, could my bank send out all the e-mail they wanted, without devoting computing time?)
- if a certain server or ISP was continually sending e-mail that wasn't verified "sendable" could they be shut down?
Give this idea a couple years and I think it might actually go somewhere.
The only effective way to stop spam is replace the current email system with a very strict whitelist approach.
Spammers can afford to build huge farms to crank out the work units for these distrubted computing projects, cause the DC projects aren't going to give up effiency to become postage proxies.
Exactly. And ontop of flip's idea, we need to totally revamp SMTP and actually give it *gasp* security features, such as having it use PGP encryption all the time the entire way to the mail server and beyond.
Am I the only one who doesn't see this as such a bad idea? I see where he's coming from and yes, it would certainly help stop the 10 trillion spam emails that get fired off on a daily basis...
bash wrote: someone was once again trying to claim ownership to part of the Internet and we should resist it.
and of course the only "owner" of the Internet is D.A.R.P.A. of the US Military
What?
yes....D.A.R.P.A., a branch of the US Military that creates new prototypes and concept weaponry, is the real owner of the Internet. Back in the 1960's D.A.R.P.A. worked to create a network for the military missle guidance computers and a communication system for all US MIL Bases in the CONUS, Alaska, and Hawaii, to enable the use of near instant and real time communications with eachother. sometime around the 1970's passing into the 80's they released this network to the business world and thus the "Internet" was born. only a short time after that, it was released to the general public and soon the world.
Most everything else is owned by ISP's. Whoever owns the physical piece of hardware owns that piece of the Internet. Doesn't matter who came up with the idea, or who set the ball rolling, it only matters who owns the physical hardware.
I use e-mail all the time...and I don't have money to throw away on something that should remain free (as long as one pays for your internet service!)
BAD idea... I don't get SPAM of any appreciable quantity on any of my e-mail accounts- EVEN my free HOTMAIL account!
There are better ways to fight spam...like re-vamping the e-mail system. Perhaps people that wanna pay for "postage" would go for that system, using the money to pay for it. I'm fine with the current FREE one.
Lothar wrote:so DARPA owns their servers and some backbone.
your missing the whole point of my post Lothar, DARPA is the sole creator of the netowkred system in the CONUS for COMPUTERS, ISP's only own their rights to their software and certain aspects of their equipment, but the name "Internet" Belongs to DARPA and the engineers that designed the system to communicate digitally and with computers
Ace the whole purpose was to keep the 'network' alive regardless of how many hard targets were hit. By design the internet is everywhere and nowhere in particular at the same time.
It's a concept not a network.
The government could shut down all it's computers and the 'internet' would be fine without them.
ACE: then tell all the publishers of my CompTia A+ books that very same thing, and maybe i will listen
ace you should be listening anyway, lest you never learn anything. you'll find that books are not written by the hand of god and/or can be misunderstood by the reader. i'm glad you're learning with your eyes, but it's best to always keep your ears open to alternate opinions as well. you'll attract friends and women will want to sleep with you.
The point of charging is that all mail would flow through a 'mail' server, as it does a router. By charing even 1/10 per email, the concept is to prevent spam.
I could care less, but i would prefer to simply track down all the spammers and ram a shotgun up their ass and pull the trigger twice