"Matthew E. Pearson" writes:
My honest recommendation although nobody wants to hear it is simple. You
accomplish it the same way telecom, video, and other providers have for
years and years.. GOVERNMENT REGULATION.
Joy. Just what everyone needs.
I hate to say it but it appears that the Internet cannot run itself anymore
The net is largely working just fine, thank you.
Perry
Oh God help us all. Government regulation would kill the net faster than a
bug under a magnifying glass. The "governments" of would have no right
meddling in such a thing, and any one of them who thinks they should make a
quick buck off taxing the net should be thrown out of office on their
butts.
Now that I have that out of my system;
Really, spam sucks. I don't know where it comes from. Every morning I
wake up with a pipe of email about money making schemes and how to find
lost cousins and I just want to punish whoever sent me it. Maybe instead
of complaining to people like AGIS, we should go after the people who
write the spamming software... or better yet, the people who distribute
lists of email addresses. They are the root of the problem, and should be
removed with extreme prejudice.
I personally believe that no network internet provider should really have
regulations as to what their customers do. They simply provide someone
with bandwidth, how they use that bandwidth is their own business, but
when it starts to harm other machines and waste resources of people who
are NOT on their network, then service should be discontinued.
Just my $1.50
Jordy
"Matthew E. Pearson" writes:
My honest recommendation although nobody wants to hear it is simple. You
accomplish it the same way telecom, video, and other providers have for
years and years.. GOVERNMENT REGULATION.
We have plenty of laws that can be applied to spam and other
_gross_ abuses of the Internet. We do not need a branch of the
FBI for the Internet. Fraud is fraud if it is done by mail or
e-mail. Denial of service attacks are clearly against the law
in many countries, states and provinces. I do not think we wish
the heavy hand of government(s) attempting to regulate content
that is, for the most part, out of our control or poking it's
nose into routing policies and peering agreements.
IMHO - Cooperation among ISPs can do more than any government can.
Cooperation can cross borders with far more ease than government
agents. (lest they are spies)