Paul Vixie said:
I operate a cooperative resource. I will not have it used against me. This is not negotiable. I pay for my part of the Internet and anyone who wants their traffic to traverse it has to make sure that I derive similar value, in the aggregate, to theirs when they send me traffic.
Karl Denninger said:
No argument -- as long as a public root server isn't there. If it wasn't I'd be SUPPORTING your black-hole list. But it is, and as such I'm not.
I understand Karl's position on this. But I would point out that there's a long history of public resources (such as root servers) being installed on parts of the net that have acceptable use policies. For example, there used to be root servers that were unable to send packets to sites that had not agreed to the NSFnet AUP. --apb (Alan Barrett)