At 06:43 AM 7/9/96 +0000, you wrote:
Michael Dillon writes:
On Tue, 9 Jul 1996, Daniel W. McRobb wrote:
There will likely never be a means for a single NSP to track down the real source of spoofed packets using IPv4. Service providers won't be letting other service providers track spoofed packets through their network.
Why not? Don't telcos do this? Or if your answer is that telcos only do it for the police and not for each other, then my question would be why can't we form an Internet equivalent, maybe affiliated with something like CERT, that can make these requests and with whom NSP's would cooperate.
What sort of incentive or penalty do you think would enable this cooperation?
Nevin
These garbage packets are flooding through somebodies network to get to the target. I'd think it would benefit the intervening operators to eliminate traffic tthat is harmful, probably illegal, and wasting the resource they sell, bandwidth. Doug Stanfield "The significant problems we face cannot be solved Oceanic Cable at the same level of thinking we were at when we Project Engineer created them." - Albert Einstein dougs@oceanic.com (808) 625-8455 fax (808) 625-5888