fox88, on 22 February 2012 - 10:40 PM, said:
Wasting dollars to get a dime is not what those guys are after.
And that's why we don't need a perfect system, we need one that's just good enough.
fox88, on 22 February 2012 - 10:40 PM, said:
Link64, on 22 February 2012 - 11:39 PM, said:
With currently RS giving 30KB/s to free users I doubt you get both.
That is what you wrote: '
he'll currently probably go with OCH and that not just because of the speed'. The last part quite clearly tells that there is no doubt on the subject of good speed.
On the other hand, there is no numerical comparison of P2P and OCH speeds neither in my nor in your posts. Making calculations now means you want to deny your own initial statement, does it not?

Note to myself: drink more coffee. But it still might makes sense... in a weird way... see, the first statement was more for the time before MU shutdown, the second includes the development after that

.
Stulle, on 22 February 2012 - 11:04 PM, said:
Okay, you convince David that IP logging is not the same as making a list for DNA samples and that an IP is about the same thing for a computer that a license plate is for a car and we got a deal. Shake hands on that?
Hmm, I'm not sure... the way the IP logging and cell phone tracking is done at the moment, it is somehow comparable to taking DNA samples of all people in the country just in case someone might commit a crime and you do that before someone actually commit a crime and left his DNA sample there, so you even don't know if it might be useful.
Now since the IP basically allows to identify you in the internet as your DNA does in real world, if we imagine that the internet is a country and the connected devices are it's citizens, logging the IPs of all devices (before any device left any traces of it's IP on some digital crime scene, actually before any crime was commited) could be indeed seen as making a list of DNA samples of all people, and that not just after a crime was commited. Remember also, until now all mass DNA tests were voluntary, collecting IPs is enforced.
As to the license plate... usually it would be for the DSL router in most cases and not any particular computer behind it, but that does not matter. But since the car is a mobile divice, I'd compare the licence plate more to the SIM card of a mobile phone as as your car isn't tracked all the time, I don't see why your mobile phone should be. When you drive too fast and they make picture, OK, keeping records of your exact path, not OK.
Stulle, on 22 February 2012 - 11:04 PM, said:
Oh and add one more point to that list. That the internet is not your home but a public space where privateers interact as much as corporations and other public organizations.
Yes, it's a public space and I'm fine with that, that some selected places like metro stations are under video surveillance, when you enter such place you are also informed about it.
Stulle, on 22 February 2012 - 11:04 PM, said:
On a more serious note, though, would be okay for you to being under video surveillance up until your houses threshold? So nobody knows what you do but they know where you go? Because - and I might actually be mistaken here - this is about what IP logging is all about... watching who went where to basically check what they did if need arises.
That's not OK anymore, it's nobody's business when I go out from home and where exactly I go (and that's already tracked for everyone who has a cell phone). I can accept, that the public transport companies like to have their own properties under video surveillance to protect it from damage or at least know who damaged it. Tracking me whereever I go from the moment I leave my home is however not necessary for that.