On Fri, Feb 11, 2000 at 10:35:57PM -0500, Paul Ferguson wrote:
I hate to ask this, but can't bite my lip, given the fact that people are throwing lawyers at this stuff now.
it is a necessary evil that we settle this ourselves. because if we don't take care of our own business, someone's going to step in and do it for us, and we won't like it. imagine, if you will, a branch of the UN making internet policy in the form of international law. this should be incentive enough.
Is it within the realm of possibility that ISP's will start to craft SLA's, peering & transit agreements, to include who is responsible for ingress filtering?
I would think so.
IMHO, ISP's should take full positive control of all the traffic they allow on their network, their route advertisements, and their responsiveness to peers/customers. ultimately, when asked who is responsible for the packets on my network, the answer is "me". it is obscene to think that folks would write contracts in such a way as to avoid their implicit responsibility for their own networks. like I said above, if we do not take responsibility for our own networks, someone else will, and we won't like the results.
Also, if so, do you think that this would technically be effcient, given that the filters would actually be applied?
once folks get it through their thick skulls that this is something that needed to happen yesteryear and give harsh stares to their vendors' geeks, I'm sure someone will figure out a way to make it technically efficient. <cliche>necessity is the mother of invention.</cliche> let the word get out that there is an immediate need for devices that can filter at very high capacity line speeds, and someone will figure out how to make it work. even engineers are suceptible to greed. :-) right now, this is probably not-so-feasable. -- Sam Thomas Geek Mercenary