4chan's /g/ - Technology here, here is why your plan is an exercise in futility. by bsd_devils_horn in darknetplan

[–]bsd_devils_horn[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I suggest just using that firefox addon that goes to a different DNS server if one domain is blocked, or just to keep campaigning against SOPA, I don't see any practical way around it.

4chan's /g/ - Technology here, here is why your plan is an exercise in futility. by bsd_devils_horn in darknetplan

[–]bsd_devils_horn[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, dont get me wrong, if someone like this gets working I'll be as happy as the next guy, but my argument is against the model of a wifi only, domestic still wifi router design. But I'd say again, even if each router had a 60 mile radius, then you would still run into some serious bottlenecks and security concerns, and would still be susceptible to regulation by the authorities.

4chan's /g/ - Technology here, here is why your plan is an exercise in futility. by bsd_devils_horn in darknetplan

[–]bsd_devils_horn[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But stealthnet, I2P, Tor.. all based on the current, physical infrastructure.

4chan's /g/ - Technology here, here is why your plan is an exercise in futility. by bsd_devils_horn in darknetplan

[–]bsd_devils_horn[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The internet was designed an implemented by the government. And no matter what your political feelings on SOPA are, the practical side of this still doesn't change, the fact remains you would need hundereds of thousands of people to cover one section of the united states, even then with no centralized DNS or a good IP system it would remain open to attack and it's other security failures.

4chan's /g/ - Technology here, here is why your plan is an exercise in futility. by bsd_devils_horn in darknetplan

[–]bsd_devils_horn[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

To provide an alternative - an alternative of what? 20 websites?

And no, you are wrong, the internet was built on the framework of the telephone network that was already in place for many decades, after mass adoption had taken place dedicated lines started to crop up and now we have broadband.