Thus spake grarpamp (grarpamp@xxxxxxxxx): > On 8/24/10, Sven Olaf Kamphuis <sven@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > In the US, the place to go is ARIN. > > To go fully PI, US, with your own registration everywhere, you'd need > roughly... > /22 ~ /21 = $1250, available for multihoming only, annual > AS = $500, for multihoming, annual > /20 ~ /19 = $2250, available for single and multi, annual > $100 = ARIN OrgID ISP fee, annual > $15 = domain name, annual > $50 ~ $bling = internet pipe, x2 for multi, month > $50 ~ $bling = 1RU, month > $500 = server, once > $beer = cool upstream with clue, every few trouble tickets > plus whatever else I missed. > Budget of $250/mo might give you perpetual service. After thinking about this and other ways of enabling the default exit policy in the US, I am beginning to wonder if the default exit policy is a really good idea here. Let's say everything goes according to plan, and we manage to get an IP allocation that allows us to handle abuse directly at a very high capacity Tor node, and we use it to run the default policy and send the BayTSP and MediaSentry complaints to /dev/null. Eventually, these organizations realize that their spam is being ignored, and report this to their clients: Universal, Viacom, and others. Let's say the best of all outcomes happens: they sue us, EFF defends us, and we win the case, establishing legal precedent that DMCA 512(a) claims need to actually prove repeated subscriber infringement before an ISP needs to do anything (a long shot, IMO). I believe it would be quite easy for big content to turn right around and lobby for even stronger DMCA protections, and possibly even data retention for anonymity providers, and succeed in changing the law. The problem is that there is a rather large climate of Intellectual Property xenophobia in the United States. This is possibly due to one of our major exports being IP, content, and design, rather than actual products, and one of our main competitors being the IP-disrespecting China. It is also combined with the fact that the Obama administration and Democrats in general tend to receive larger contributions from Hollywood and big content than Republicans. There has been a large influx of big content/copyright lawyers at the DoJ, and the FBI's #1 investigative priority is copyright infringement, which indicate these current trends: http://www.fudzilla.com/home/news/fbi-considers-copyright-cases-top-priority http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/02/influx-of-big-content-lawyers-at-doj-cause-for-concern.ars We also already have ACTA on the horizon. I'm not sure if giving ammo to people who have managed to rewrite copyright law every time the first Mickey Mouse drawings are about to pass into public domain is something we want to do. Also, personally, I'd rather see P2P traffic on an purely internal overlay network like I2P, rather than overloading a network that is vital for general anonymous communication with the rest of the Internet, like Tor. Tor isn't even safe for P2P anyway: https://blog.torproject.org/blog/bittorrent-over-tor-isnt-good-idea As such, I've tried to add yet more ports to the reduced exit policy: https://blog.torproject.org/blog/tips-running-exit-node-minimal-harassment and I think this is the policy we should advise for high-speed nodes in the US. Thoughts about this? -- Mike Perry Mad Computer Scientist fscked.org evil labs
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