18.18.1. What the core issues are...a tough thing to analyze - untraceablility as a basic construct has major implications + can often ask what the implications would be if, say: - invisibility existed - untraceability existed - By "tough to analyze" I mean that things are often coflated, mixed together. Is it the "reputations" that matter, or the "anonymity"? The "untraceability" or the "digital money"? 18.18.2. Price signalling in posts...for further information + When an article is posted, and there is more complete information available elsewhere by ftp, gopher, mosaic, etc., then how is this to to be signalled without actually advertising prominently? - why not a code, like the "Geek code" so many people put in their sigs? The code could be parsed by a reader and used to automatically fetch the information, pay for it, etc. (Agents that can be built in to newsreaders.) 18.18.3. "What should Cypherpunks support for "cable" or "set-top box" standards? - Caveats: My opinions, offered only to help frame the debate. And many of us reject the idea of government- mandated "standards," so my phrasing here is not meant to imply support of such standards. + Major alternatives: + Set-top box, with t.v. as core of access to "information superhighway." + Problems: - limited number of channels, even if "500 channels" - makes t.v. the focus, loses some other capabilities - few consumers will have television sets with the resolution capabilities that even current computer monitors have (there are reasons for this: size of monitors (related to viewing distance), NTSC constraints, age of televisions, etc.) + Switched-packet cable, as in ATM or even SONET (Synchronous Optical Network) access + Advantages: - Television is just one more switched-packet transmission, not using up the bandwidth + Radical Proposal: Complete deregulation + let cable suppliers--especially of optical fibers, which are small and unobtrusive--lay fibers to any home they can negotiate access to - e.g., by piggybacking on telephone lines, electrical cables, etc. (to remove the objection about unsightly new poles or cables being strung...should not be an issue with fiber optics) - let the market decide...let customers decide + In my view, government standards are a terrible idea here. Sure, NTSC was an effective standard, but it likely would have emerged without government involvement. Ditto for Ethernet and a zillion other standards. No need for government involvement. - Of course, when industry groups meet to discuss standards, one hopes that antitrust laws will not be invoked. 18.18.4. minor point: the importance of "But does it scale?" is often exaggerated - in many cases, it's much more important to simply get something deployed than it is to worry in advance about how it will break if too many people use it (e.g., MacDonald's worrying in 1955 about scalabilty of their business). - Remailer networks, for example, may not scale especially well in their current form...but who cares? Getting them used will allow further refinement.
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