nanog mailing list archives
Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy...
From: Carl Karsten <carl () personnelware com>
Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2007 13:28:32 -0500
The real way to get rid of tasting would be to persuade Google and Yahoo/Overture to stop paying for clicks on pages with no content other than ads, but that would be far too reasonable.
I don't see a practical way to enforce it.I believe the Net is an unstable system that will eventually be rendered useless by spam/etc. It is a cheap unlimited resource - you pay for your connection, and you get access to things you are in no way paying for. I don't see a way to fix it.
Carl K
Current thread:
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy..., (continued)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Steve Atkins (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Valdis . Kletnieks (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Chris L. Morrow (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Carl Karsten (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Chris L. Morrow (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... John Levine (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Jeremy Hanmer (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... John Levine (Aug 13)
- Message not available
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Chris L. Morrow (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... John Levine (Aug 15)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Carl Karsten (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Dorn Hetzel (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Dorn Hetzel (Aug 13)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Andrew Sullivan (Aug 15)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Warren Kumari (Aug 15)
- Re: [policy] When Tech Meets Policy... Marshall Eubanks (Aug 13)