Home
| Calendar
| Mail Lists
| List Archives
| Desktop SIG
| Hardware Hacking SIG
Wiki | Flickr | PicasaWeb | Video | Maps & Directions | Installfests | Keysignings Linux Cafe | Meeting Notes | Linux Links | Bling | About BLU |
D. J. Bernstein has proposed a new email protocol (http://cr.yp.to/im2000.html) in which every email message is stored on the *sender's* machine (or the sender's ISP's machine) until the receiver confirms that it has downloaded the message. I don't know anything else about this protocol -- maybe Bernstein and the other folks on the IM2000 are still arguing over details -- but it seems to me that setting up some kind of new email system along these lines would make it significantly easier to control spam. With SMTP, a spammer needs to do is get control of an Internet connection for *just long enough* to send a zillion messages, and then evaporate. With a "sender-stores" protocol, the spammer would have to keep control of a server until all of the targets *download* the message. If one of those targets complains about the message, the complainant's ISP doesn't need to wade through the "Received:" headers to find the message's origin; there would be a single point on the Net, the point where the message was stored, that would have to take responsibility. -- "I thoroughly disapprove of duels. If a man should challenge me, I would take him kindly and forgivingly by the hand and lead him to a quiet place and kill him." --Mark Twain // seth gordon // sethg at ropine.com // http://ropine.com/sethg/cv.html //
BLU is a member of BostonUserGroups | |
We also thank MIT for the use of their facilities. |