Pursuing P2P Privacy via the Grapevine
Published June 14, 2003
While the entertainment industry and the Ashcroft Justice Department seek to erode or cripple free exchange over the Intenet, some are working to keep it free:
- We are creating an anonymizing storage network - a network that resembles the World Wide Web, but is capable of allowing people to publish and retrieve information without fear of censorship or surveillance.
Please take the time to read the excerpt below from the Council of Europe's recently declassified (in a democracy?) Convention on Cybercrime - which stands a good chance of being adopted worldwide.
We are developing this software for two main reasons:
We believe your right to privacy and free speech is inalienable - that is - you were born with it, and no government (or unaccountable and secretive international organization for that matter) has the right to take it away.
We believe that intellectual property law is being seriously abused by industrial interests and corrupt governments, to the detriment of all humanity.
FAQ:
- What does it do?
To use Grapevine, a user installs the Grapevine software, making them part of a global data storage network. The goals are:
You can publish anything for free (no matter how popular it gets).
You can publish anonymously.
You can surf anonymously.
It is difficult for any authority to censor the network.
It is difficult for any authority to shut the network down.
Files are retrieved reliably.
A balance is struck between anonymity and efficiency.
The network can scale to any size.
Hasn't this been done?
Not really. This is a new technology. The idea has been around for about five years, but it has never been successfully executed. (Or, at least it has never been executed to our satisfaction.) This project brings a new approach, though it borrows from other attempts.
Is it the way of the future?
I'm glad you asked me that! The Web is based upon the "client-server" architecture, which has problems with scalability and robustness. The Grapevine is an inherently more efficient and reliable way to distribute information than the World Wide Web. Technology of this type will be the foundation for the Internet of the future.
- Pursuing P2P Privacy via the Grapevine
- Published: June 14, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Sci/Tech
- Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Internet
- Writer: Eric Olsen
- Eric Olsen's BC Writer page
- Eric Olsen's personal site
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Mhhhh, aside from the storing of files, I don't really see where there's a difference to all the other stuff out there. Any volunteers who could explain that to me?