the protocols ability to "route around" failures is an attribute of packet based protocols. it has little to do with legal compliance of an order to cease and desist forwarding packets. end of the day, i guess it boils down to the question of -civil disobedience- if the law is unjust, do you comply because it is the law, or do you protest, at the risk of punishment/death? hardly a wire-protocol question - no? --bill On Fri, Feb 04, 2011 at 01:49:09PM -0800, Hayden Katzenellenbogen wrote:
Not sure if it has been said already but wasn't one of the key point for the creation of the internet to create and infrastructure that would survive in the case of all out war and massive destruction. (strategic nuclear strikes)
Does it not bode ill for "national security" if any party could take out a massive communication system by destroying/pressuring a few choke points?
-----Original Message----- From: JC Dill [mailto:jcdill.lists@gmail.com] Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2011 11:39 PM To: NANOG list Subject: Re: Weekend Gedankenexperiment - The Kill Switch
On 03/02/11 10:38 PM, Paul Ferguson wrote:
And as an aside, governments will always believe that that they can
control
the flow of information, when push comes to shove.
This has always been a hazard, and will always continue to be so.
As technologists, we need to be cognizant of that fact.
In the US, by accident (surely not by design) we are lucky that our network of networks does not have the convenient 4 chokepoints that the Egyptian network had, making it easy for the government to shut off the entier internet by putting pressure on just 4 companies.
Where we *really* need to be fighting this battle is in the laws and policies that are producing a duopoly in much of the US where consumers have 2 choices, the ILEC for DSL or their local cableco for Cable Internet. As theses companies push smaller competing ISPs out of business, and as they consolidate (e.g. Cablecos buying each other up, resulting in fewer and fewer cablecos over time), we head down the direction of Egypt, where pressure on just a few companies CAN shut down
the entire internet. Otherwise we end up with a few companies that will
play Visa and PayPal and roll over and play dead when a government official says "Wikileaks is bad" - and equally easily will shut down their entire networks for "national security".
If you *really* believe that the TSA is effective, you would be in favor
of an Internet Kill Switch. If you understand that this is really security theater, and despite all the inconvenience we aren't really any
safer, then you should equally be very concerned that someone ever has the power to order that the internet be "shut down" for our safety.
jc