] So, between spam, anti-spam blacklists, rogue packets, ] never-forgetting search engines, viruses, old machines, ] bad regulatory bodies, and bad implementations, I fear ] that the open Internet is going to die sooner than I ] would have expected. In its place I expect to see a more ] fragmented network - one in which only "approved" ] end-to-end communications will be permitted. I happen to think this is true. Who is doing the approval is the question. The fact is that if anyone can decide how things are approved, then everything is fine. I cut my whack account over to a challenge response system. Bang, its useable again. I get no spam there at all, and all the people I talk to are getting through just fine. I'm happy. I think it will work just fine... In fact, if the internet had more close knit communities I think it would be better off. Moving to the country side to escape the noise is not the same as censorship. The end of the open internet... |