--On Sunday, 20 June, 2004 12:45 +0200 Hadmut Danisch <hadmut@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Sat, Jun 19, 2004 at 11:40:03PM -0400, John C Klensin wrote: > >> First, Hadmut, and others with his concerns in other >> countries, probably need to approach the local regulatory >> authorities who are concerned about consumer fraud and say >> "the range of things that people are selling under the name >> 'Internet service' includes too broad a range. > > Correct in principle, but no chance to do it in reality. > > If I contact the regulatory authorities, they will ask > me "What's wrong with those ISP's?" > > I answer "They do... and the don't..." > > They'd say: Uhm, we're familiar with the Internet in > common, but not with all those details. Most people seem > to be happy with that, and if not, why don't you change to > a provider of your taste? We don't see why there is a need > to change the status quo of ISPs. > > I'd reply: Because that's not correct. This is not "Internet". > This is some approx. This causes technical problems. This is > fraud. > > They'd say: Who are you to tell what's correct and what's > "Internet"? Nobody has ever defined that term. If there > is no definition, then there is no "correct" or "not correct". > > > > But if we had a precise definition and a taxonomy of the > different classes of ISPs, I could say: Look, the > IETF has given a definition. They're the guys who > control the internet and keep it running well. They > are exactly the ones to tell what's correct and > what's not. And now, some of those german providers > are violating law. Because they are actually advertising > to provide internet, what they in fact don't do. > False advertising is unlawful. While I don't precisely agree with parts of your description in that paragraph (e.g., the IETF really doesn't "control the Internet") that is precisely why draft-klensin-ip-service-terms was written. The questions, I think, are: * Is it right, or at least "good enough" given that goal? * What does the IESG want to do to process it, and when? * Can we move forward with something like that, with all of its inperfections, rather than getting bogged down in debates about changing things we can't possibly change, religion about various practices that exist and that people profit by selling, and alternate realities in which the IETF can actually dictate what people should do to be "legal". "Can we "make" or "force" anyone to use an particular terms?" is explicitly not on that list. It wouldn't be a good idea, and the answer is "no" anyway. I don't know the answer to any of those questions. The draft was posted just as an attempt to begin moving toward answers on all three, rather than just having periodic discussions of how much nicer the world would be if it were different. And, without having any idea about the specific situation in Germany, I would hope that, in many countries, were such a list of terms and definitions standardized, it would be possible to go to the regulators and say "Ok, here is a definition from a recognized standards group with some plausible credentials for understanding the Internet. It defines some service distinctions and why knowledge about those distinctions is likely to be useful to an educated consumer trying to make choices*. I think that it would be useful if you either required providers to supply information about their services in those terms, or at least to establish the principle that using the terms in misleading ways will be considered fraudulent". We actually might make some progress that way. * The area of "why someone should care about these terms" is not, IMO, sufficiently handled in the document. Text would be welcome as long as it maintains the tone of the document, i.e., that it avoid denouncing anyone or anything other than lying about what is being offered. As editor (at least temporarily) of the only draft in this area that has been posted and that I consider realistic given real-world realities, I want to again try to reinforce the observation made by Ole and others. There are services (or, if you prefer, disservices) out there that real people are paying real money for and using happily. To tell the providers of those services "you must be clear about what you are providing" is reasonable and not intrinsically offensive: they have enough of a market that they will probably presume they can sell them even if they are described clearly. To tell them "you can't provide that service because they imply that no one will be able to operate a full-capability, permanent-address server out of a one-night-stay in a hotel room" is nonsense and will be treated that way -- they will respond that no one wants to buy such a thing and will be, to a first-order approximation, correct. >From personal experience, if I check into a hotel and hook up to the local Ethernet, or use a public hotspot, I'll happily use services with characteristics that would be unthinkable for my office connection and servers. At the same time, if I discover that those hotel or hotspot services won't permit me to run tunnels back to my home servers, I'm going to be _really_ unhappy. It is the disclosure that is important. And, personally, I'd consider it huge forward progress if I can call up a hotel I'm contemplating staying in and say "do you provide Internet service at level xyz" and get a straight, meaningful, and reliable answer. That requires only some standard definitions and a certain amount of good faith. Will some hotels (and some [dis]service providers) lie? Probably. But that is a problem the community will have to deal with in some other way: I've checked into hotels that claim to be four-star facilities and that don't come anywhere close, but word gets around, regulators get irritated, and so on. I think doing that well --establishing sufficient criteria that one can say "you are lying" without having the hotel or provider saying "there are no definitions, so nothing we say is a lie"-- would be good progress. Not enough to create a utopia in which there are no NATs, no filters, static addresses for the duration of a stay that I could obtain along with my confirmation number, and no attempts to provide/claim "broadband" service in which a 500 room hotel feeds into a single fractional T1, but a useful start. john _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf