1996-01-13 - Re: Shimomura on BPF, NSA and Crypto

Header Data

From: hallam@w3.org
To: gnu@toad.com>
Message Hash: 751dd7b79be626df71373f92020480f75e8afc89130e01c305d3c5458b9e9c97
Message ID: <9601131747.AA11926@zorch.w3.org>
Reply To: <9601130957.AA19298@toad.com>
UTC Datetime: 1996-01-13 18:01:30 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 14 Jan 1996 02:01:30 +0800

Raw message

From: hallam@w3.org
Date: Sun, 14 Jan 1996 02:01:30 +0800
To: gnu@toad.com>
Subject: Re: Shimomura on BPF, NSA and Crypto
In-Reply-To: <9601130957.AA19298@toad.com>
Message-ID: <9601131747.AA11926@zorch.w3.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



>Tsutomu has lots of glib rhetoric about how he just builds tools and
>they can be used for good or evil.  This tool is custom-designed for
>evil.  

Rubbish, it would allow me to do something I urgently need to do - measure the 
performance of the main internet links. This is presently very difficult to do 
since the berkley sockets provide no network performance information to the 
application layer.

What I need is a means of determining the fragmentation, packet delay, 
throttling rate etc etc. This is information avaliable in the Kernel but I don't 
know how to get at it. The packet filters would provide a means to monitor, 
Tsutomu's kit would do the job better.

The reason why I need this type of stuff is that a number of governments are 
asking how many T3 lines they need to string across the ocean to get into the 
Internet game. If hard figures are avaliable they can make the case to fund 
them. [No Libertarian flames about government subsidy please, I'm not 
interested]

		Phill





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