1993-09-10 - IETF + PEM = Internet Commerce

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From: “L. Detweiler” <ld231782@longs.lance.colostate.edu>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: d6f7db079df209a17de19607388c17a07a07c723662fec449213ac4f9ba94f0a
Message ID: <9309100539.AA02295@longs.lance.colostate.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-09-10 05:47:33 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 9 Sep 93 22:47:33 PDT

Raw message

From: "L. Detweiler" <ld231782@longs.lance.colostate.edu>
Date: Thu, 9 Sep 93 22:47:33 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: IETF + PEM = Internet Commerce
Message-ID: <9309100539.AA02295@longs.lance.colostate.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Report: the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force) is very pro-commerce
and recently met in Amsterdam for a session to discuss Internet
Mercantile Protocols (IMP). It would allow consumers & companies on the
Internet to combine PEM and MIME to complete and automate commercial transactions.

J. C. Davin, previously of Bellcore helped initiate the IMP project. He
envisions a standard that would allow companies to sell data such as
image files or software. Another approach being considered would allow
a sort of `home shopping network' approach.

Meeting m Amsterdam minutes can be found at thumper.bellcore.com. 
Directory path: pub/devetzis/imp. Get: imp-archive.

Mail me for more information.

- - -

On a related note, Bob Metcalf of IETF and columnist for InfoWorld was
on NPR recently and talked about the `pampered elite' of people with
Unix machines that are currently using the internet. The comment was
clarified to mean that a vast audience of people with PCs and Macs and
other low-end computers are mostly unconnected. IETF membership info appended.

He shows a strong commitment to:

1) increasing address space for participants of the next century -
`upgrading in one of the biggest cutovers since Great Britain decided
to drive on the right side of the road'

2) exploiting ATM with ``cell-based protocols, operating systems, and
applications.  Otherwise, the Internet stays stuck in its current
20-year-old ASCII-bound applications -- TELNET, FTP, and E-mail.''

3) strong support for *individual* subscribers vs. the current
institutional monopoly, with ISDN playing a central role

4) he's in favor of usage billing as a critical aspect of commercial
development. ``Internet carriers must be able, as are telephone
companies, to settle with one another for traffic carried on behalf of
each other's customers.''

 From: "Bob Metcalfe" <Bob_Metcalfe@ccgate.infoworld.com>
>if you want to join the Internet Society, as I just did, 
>to keep in touch with how the third generation is coming along, it costs $70 
>per year and gets you the quarterly /Internet Society News/.  Call >703-620-8990.





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