[SGVLUG] SOPA/Protect IP bill moving forward to gut DNS security
John Kreznar
jek at ininx.com
Thu Nov 17 03:23:01 PST 2011
In a posting purporting to be from Braydon <ronin at braydon.com> but
lacking a digital signature, it is written:
> On 11/16/2011 11:50 PM, John Kreznar wrote:
>>> fyi - perhaps now is a good time to contact your congressperson...
>> ... or apply technology to defend against them:
>> http://freedomboxfoundation.org/learn
> I'm curious how they are going to handle this portion:
> "If our internet plug is pulled, the box will use mesh routing to talk
> to other boxes like it."
Here is a selection from their mailing list that gives something of the
flavor of current discussion there of this portion. It also provides
subscription information for the mailing list if you're interested.
Incidentally, that the author of the posting is John Gilmore gives an
idea of the caliber of people involved on the project.
This particular posting is also interesting because of the recent
discussion here of OpenWRT.
Message-Id: <201108210952.p7L9qM86004401 at new.toad.com>
To: freedombox-discuss at lists.alioth.debian.org
Date: Sun, 21 Aug 2011 02:52:22 -0700
From: John Gilmore <gnu at toad.com>
Subject: [Freedombox-discuss] CeroWRT (OpenWRT with DNSSEC, mesh routing,
etc) RC5 is out
List-Subscribe: <http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/freedombox-discuss>,
<mailto:freedombox-discuss-request at lists.alioth.debian.org?subject=subscribe>
I just noticed:
http://www.bufferbloat.net/news/18
CeroWrt is a project to resolve endemic problems in home networking
today, and to push the state of the art of edge networks and routers
forward. Projects include tighter integration with DNSSEC, wireless
mesh networking (Wisp6), measurements of networking and censorship
issues (BISMark), among others, notably reducing bufferbloat in both
the wired and wireless components of the stack.
These folks are targeting much smaller hardware than FreedomBox
(Netgear wifi routers with >8MB of flash memory), but they are
actively making a plug-and-play-rather-than-administer router that
includes the basics of what FBX wants, like mesh routing, ipv6,
dnssec. We can learn from them.
Their main research goal is to reduce "bufferbloat", which is the
tendency of network hardware and software (in the modern days of cheap
RAM) to queue packets rather than dropping them. This confuses
classic TCP, which depends on packet loss to signal congestion. When
TCP never hears back about congestion, it starts filling up the
buffers somewhere deep in the net, which seriously sideswipes the
latency experienced by all competing traffic. Even one massive TCP
connection, in the presence of bufferbloat, can make dozens of other
nearby TCP connections take SECONDS to get through. Unfortunately,
bufferbloat is everywhere in modern network hardware and software, so
removing it is a long-term project. The CeroWRT folks are part of
the vanguard of fixing it.
John
--
OpenPGP key: http://ininx.com
John E. Kreznar jek at ininx.com 9F1148454619A5F08550 705961A47CC541AFEF13
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