1993-01-15 - Re: anonymous service shutdown (pax)

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From: dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au (David Clunie)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 198f9eac37aac8545b566c11775d05694551f3f5b21ae978a5202d06fd9aab55
Message ID: <9301150003.AA00743@britt>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-01-15 00:03:48 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 14 Jan 93 16:03:48 PST

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From: dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au (David Clunie)
Date: Thu, 14 Jan 93 16:03:48 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: anonymous service shutdown (pax)
Message-ID: <9301150003.AA00743@britt>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


I have had a fairly long discussion via email with the AARnnet administrator
involved.

He points out that wrongly or rightly (he believes wrongly) the AARNet
does not have an "open access" policy, and the network is setup exclusively
to service the university community. Public access systems are tolerated, but
barely, and mainly through the grace of those who administer the system
rather than those who fund it.

The complaint in question was actually not at all specific, and came not
from the NSF but from one of the NASA Internet officers who is responsible
for the US end of the link to Australia (and pay for some of it). Essentially
the complaint was one of increasing mail traffic on an already congested link
to the US, as well as concern about the "hiding people's identities so they
cannot be responsible for what they say".

Personally I disagree with the second complaint, but cannot dispute the first,
without statistsics about what component of the link was being consumed by
the posting service. I suspect it was very small but these things all add
up.

It seems a shame that the anonymous system is being terminated "on principle"
but the AARNet person has been friendly about it, in fact positively
graceful in view of my somewhat inflammatory post, and so I guess I just
have to leave it there.

Hopefully eventually commercial vendors will provide an alternative channel
to the university-based network here currently, much as has happened in the
US over the years, and these questions will be less of a concern.

david





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