1992-12-18 - Re: The Need for Positive Repuations

Header Data

From: Marc Horowitz <marc@MIT.EDU>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 126a4d7c3c8ae22013befee47e5d363e43a47c3ee5136bc9634e8fe4a9b637b9
Message ID: <9212182252.AA06643@tla>
Reply To: <9212182054.AA11836@acf3.NYU.EDU>
UTC Datetime: 1992-12-18 22:53:18 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 18 Dec 92 14:53:18 PST

Raw message

From: Marc Horowitz <marc@MIT.EDU>
Date: Fri, 18 Dec 92 14:53:18 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: The Need for Positive Repuations
In-Reply-To: <9212182054.AA11836@acf3.NYU.EDU>
Message-ID: <9212182252.AA06643@tla>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Go read Ender's Game.  They had a seriously electronic society.  There
were public message boards, and positive-reputation-based boards.
Basically, if you demonstrated a clue on the public boards, then
someone already reputable could recommend you for "membership" in the
reputation-based boards.  One of the characters did so anonymously.
She even got paid for writing editorials, etc.  Anybody could watch
the proceeedings of the reputeable boards.  In time, she was competing
in debates with major politicians, et. al.  Sci-fi?  or Reality?  I
believe we could move from the former to the latter.  (And I just
avoided any sort of spoiler about the plot ;-)

Imagine a system where spaf distributed the public key of the
moderator(s) of a moderated newgroup.  News servers would make sure
that the message was signed by the moderator, or that the poster
included some sort of certificate, signed by the moderator, indicating
that he could post without having to go through the moderator first.
Expirations and/or revocation lists would be needed to do things
right, but these are problems with fairly good solutions.

		Marc





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