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MAIL: commercial remailers



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I wrote:
>>Interesting point... I guess that is a good reason why free anonymous
>>remailers might not ever die out, but pay remailers may be able to
>>offer enhanced features and services that would tend to attract the
>>vast majority of customers (assuming such a service would be
>>considered as valuable by enough people ;)

Scott wrote:
> In actuality having only purely commercial remailers in a chain
> would likely lead to security concerns of the following nature. When
> remailers end up requiring postage, people will tend to use the
> cheapest remailers to cut down on costs. Who will be in a position to
> offer the cheapest rates under a commercial proposition? Someone who

But this assumes that commercial remailers will not take in enough
money to keep themselves afloat.  Which could very well be true!

What you describe is a serious problem indeed: in which only a "deep
pockets/government front/whatever" can run a pay remailer and most
free remailers exist on unsecure systems.

> This speaks highly for the "every man a remailer" concept. If you know
> people who run remailers and trust that they are not compromised

But this is the problem, if the remailer operator is just an ordinary
user, he/she may not even know their remailer is compromised, since
there is only so much an ordinary user can do.  You're trustworthy
friends may be victim of a sysadmin who does sendmail logging, etc.

Karl Barrus
[email protected]

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-- 
Karl L. Barrus: [email protected]         
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"One man's mnemonic is another man's cryptography" - K. Cooper