On Fri, 25 Jan 2008, Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu wrote:
On Thu, 24 Jan 2008 22:33:20 PST, Owen DeLong said:
And oddly enough, license plates on cars act *exactly the same way* - but nobody seems at all surprised when police can work backwards from a plate and come up with a suspect (who, admittedly, may not have been involved if the car was borrowed/stolen/etc).
In order to be using the license plate, you had to be physically present in the car.
"It wasn't me at the hit-and-run, my car was stolen last night"
"It wasn't me, my PC got zombied"
Like I said, they work *exactly the same way*.
But I'm giving up. We've got people here who work for companies that have business models that boil down to "given an IP address, figure out who to bill" - but although it identifies a person well enough to send them an invoice, they think it isn't enough to identify them.
I wouldn't be suprised if in a few years some EU/US law mandates IP number portability, just like people have with their cellphones. Imagine what that will do to the routing tables. How many /32s can we get into the RIBs these days? :-) -Hank