1995-10-24 - Re: Remailer-in-a-Box, Everyone a Remailer

Header Data

From: Jay Campbell <edge@got.net>
To: tcmay@got.net (Timothy C. May)
Message Hash: 063ee2cb94d0c0b7ab47e9e1b2d2a07b5167a545b059149c6a3d87d0def65771
Message ID: <199510241458.HAA27765@you.got.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-10-24 14:41:34 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 24 Oct 95 07:41:34 PDT

Raw message

From: Jay Campbell <edge@got.net>
Date: Tue, 24 Oct 95 07:41:34 PDT
To: tcmay@got.net (Timothy C. May)
Subject: Re: Remailer-in-a-Box, Everyone a Remailer
Message-ID: <199510241458.HAA27765@you.got.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



>Rather, a single physical machine site can and should be able to run many
>remailers, out of user accounts. (Accounts on systems like Sameer's C2. Or
>Hal's remailer running on Portal. Or maybe some of the Mixmaster clients.)

This also brings up the idea of 'opportunistic remailers' again (somebody
gimme a snazzy name for that) - a PC/Mac-based SMTPish server that isn't
always online. Shell accounts are becoming a piece of history for most
users; part-time dialup IP (ppp/slip) is the predominant connectivity layer.
A user could run an opportunistic remailer, and compile a list of other opp
remailers his server would poll in addition to the standard shell-based
'always up' remailers. Given a large enough list (ie, everyone on this list
ran this app in the background) there should be plenty of opp remailers
online and ready to relay at any given time to make this an effective model.
--
   Jay Campbell   Regional Operations Manager
   -=-=-=-=-=-=-  Sense Networking (Santa Cruz Node) 
   edge@got.net   MIT PGP KeyID 0xACAE1A89           
 
"On the Information Superhighway, I'm the guy 
  behind you in this morning's traffic jam leaning on his horn."






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