1996-02-02 - Re: [NOISY] Deutsche Telekom <–> webcom.com “routing troubles”

Header Data

From: “E. ALLEN SMITH” <EALLENSMITH@ocelot.Rutgers.EDU>
To: rich@c2.org
Message Hash: 1c54b818f429390fa526310de8059f79079a07e49872b4a5a6bef5b160314089
Message ID: <01I0PPI0LL00A0UNHV@mbcl.rutgers.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-02-02 03:22:02 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 11:22:02 +0800

Raw message

From: "E. ALLEN SMITH" <EALLENSMITH@ocelot.Rutgers.EDU>
Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 11:22:02 +0800
To: rich@c2.org
Subject: Re: [NOISY] Deutsche Telekom <--> webcom.com "routing troubles"
Message-ID: <01I0PPI0LL00A0UNHV@mbcl.rutgers.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


	While it fortunately seems that the German government is getting some
sense, I've had one idea for future such anti-censorship efforts. It's that,
despite Alta Vista and other spiders, sometimes things on the web don't get
spotted by search engines very soon. Having information out there doesn't do
much good if people who haven't been following newsgroups, etcetera don't know
about it.
	Rich and Declan may have thought of this already, but I haven't seen it
on cypherpunks. There is a web page for multiple search-engine submissions at
http://www.submit-it.com/. I don't know how well it works, since I haven't used
it (yet). But it might be something to try.
	-Allen 





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