[146411] in cryptography@c2.net mail archive
Re: [Cryptography] Email and IM are ideal candidates for
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (ianG)
Tue Aug 27 15:50:14 2013
X-Original-To: cryptography@metzdowd.com
Date: Tue, 27 Aug 2013 20:34:47 +0300
From: ianG <iang@iang.org>
To: cryptography@metzdowd.com
In-Reply-To: <tYc4wECFwuGSFAWD@highwayman.com>
Errors-To: cryptography-bounces+crypto.discuss=bloom-picayune.mit.edu@metzdowd.com
On 26/08/13 08:47 AM, Richard Clayton wrote:
>> Even without the recent uproar over email privacy, at some point, someone was
>> going to come up with a product along the following lines: Buy a cheap,
>> preconfigured box with an absurd amount of space (relative to the "huge" amounts
>> of space, like 10GB, the current services give you); then sign up for a service
>> that provides your MX record and on-line, encrypted backup space for a small
>> monthly fee. (Presumably free services to do the same would also appear,
>> perhaps from some of the dynamic DNS providers.)
>
> Just what the world needs, more free email sending provision! sigh
Right. One of the problems with email (as pointed out in OP's original
post) is that it is free to send *and* it can be sent to everyone. The
combination of these two assumptions/requirements is essential for spam.
Chat systems have pretty much killed spam by making it non-possible to
send to everyone. You need an introduction/invite/process/barrier, first.
This has worked pretty well. Maybe the writing is on the wall?
Maybe we just need to let email die?
We can move email over to the 'IM technology' layer. We can retain the
email metaphor by simply adding it to chat clients, and by adding IM
technology to existing email clients. Both clients can allow us to
write emails and send them, over their known IM channels to known contacts.
Why do we need the 1980s assumption of being able to send freely to
everyone, anyway?
iang
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