On Thu, Apr 24, 2008 at 5:30 AM, Michael Holstein <michael.holstein@csuohio.edu> wrote:
ISP's have been very clear that they regard their network maps as being proprietary for many good reasons. The approach that P4P takes is to have an intermediate server (which we call an iTracker) that processes the network maps and provides abstracted guidance (lists of IP prefixes and percentages) to the p2p networks that allows them to figure out which peers are near each other. The iTracker can be run by the ISP or by a trusted third party, as the ISP prefers.
Won't this approach (using a ISP-managed intermediate) ultimately end up being co-opted by the lawyers for the various industry "interest groups" and thus be ignored by the p2p users?
Cheers,
Michael Holstein Cleveland State University
This idea is what I am concerned about. Until the whole copyright mess gets sorted out, wouldn't these iTracker supernodes be a goldmine of logs for copyright lawyers? They would have a great deal of information about what exactly is being transferred, by whom and for how long. -Mike Gonnason _______________________________________________ NANOG mailing list NANOG@nanog.org http://mailman.nanog.org/mailman/listinfo/nanog