I'm not so sure. If someone got the banks, credit card (fintech), big online shopping, etc (tho not a lot of etc needed) on board, the "head count" for that wouldn't be very large, and others would join (particularly retail) just to not be left out... One can build a quite different network on top of the existing infrastructure at least to get started, NEWSTUFF/IP. That would only then require buy-in by end-users but if that's what's on their phone etc and the only way they can access banks, shopping, etc. People here would deliver all those packets since it'd just look like IP and go from there. Reminds me of the old expression "when it's time to hang the capitalists they will sell us the rope" (when it comes time to replace this internet they will deliver our packets.) The obvious (to me) change would be positive id of anyone accessing that new network. The voice system seems to have achieved this to about a 99% level which is more than good enough. And it would be a boon to them also, no more annoyingly free voice/video stuff. By which I mean if they thought it was credible they might pony up a billion or two to get it going. Then if they hit some critical mass they can consider replacing IP and routing regimens etc also (the goal being largely to secure it), on top of the existing "wire" infrastructure. On December 16, 2020 at 07:48 mark.tinka@seacom.com (Mark Tinka) wrote:
On 12/16/20 02:38, bzs@theworld.com wrote:
Somedays I wonder if it's some vast, well-funded, Spectre-like organization whose backers just want to see trust in the internet undermined in the public's eyes on behalf of their own non-internet or anti-internet (think: phone companies who'd love to charge you per email and web page access for example by forcing you onto some private network) enterprises, large bricks+mortars interests etc.
If it were, they'd be fighting a losing battle.
The Internet has acquired exponential scale. It would never operate in such a pay-to-click model.
Mark.
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