Simple, not allowing anonymous activity. If everything was required to be crypto-graphically signed in such a way that it was tied to a known entity then this could be directly addressed. It’s essentially the same problem that e-mail has with SPAM and not allowing anonymous traffic would mostly solve that problem as well.
Of course many internet users would (rightfully) fight that solution tooth and nail.
For just accessing a simple resource, it does not use a whole lot of power because it only gets activated when the resource is under load and it helps to sort traffic based on effort placed to the POW puzzle. You can choose to place zero effort and be put in the back of the line, but people who choose to put in some small effort will be put in front of you, and people who put in a larger effort will be in front of them until the resource is no longer oversubscribed, and then it will drop back down to zero. That’s how the Tor network handles it and it works incredibly well. It has stopped the denial of service attacks in their tracks. In most cases, it’s hardly ever even active. Just because it is there, deters attacking it.
take the resources from them so they don’t have them anymore. infiltrating the teams that do this and exposing or sabotaging the effort. literally fighting back, possibly in ways that involve giving the CEO’s and prominent investors a free trip to an old coal mine.
Assuming we could build a new internet from the ground up, what would be the solution? IPFS for load-balancing?
There is no technical solution that will stop corporations with deep pockets in a capitalist society
Maybe letters through the mail to receive posts.
And only then because the USPS is a federal agency. You can bet if private corporations ran it there would be no such privacy.
so basically what you are saying is to not put information on public places, but only send information to specific people
How long will USPS last?
AI will come up there to abuse it as well
Simple, not allowing anonymous activity. If everything was required to be crypto-graphically signed in such a way that it was tied to a known entity then this could be directly addressed. It’s essentially the same problem that e-mail has with SPAM and not allowing anonymous traffic would mostly solve that problem as well.
Of course many internet users would (rightfully) fight that solution tooth and nail.
No, that’s not a solution, since it would make privacy impossible and bad actors would still find ways around.
Proof of work before connections are established. The Tor network implemented this in August of 2023 and it has helped a ton.
PoW uses a lot of electricity on the client side so environmentally it’s a poor solution, especially at scale.
For just accessing a simple resource, it does not use a whole lot of power because it only gets activated when the resource is under load and it helps to sort traffic based on effort placed to the POW puzzle. You can choose to place zero effort and be put in the back of the line, but people who choose to put in some small effort will be put in front of you, and people who put in a larger effort will be in front of them until the resource is no longer oversubscribed, and then it will drop back down to zero. That’s how the Tor network handles it and it works incredibly well. It has stopped the denial of service attacks in their tracks. In most cases, it’s hardly ever even active. Just because it is there, deters attacking it.
take the resources from them so they don’t have them anymore. infiltrating the teams that do this and exposing or sabotaging the effort. literally fighting back, possibly in ways that involve giving the CEO’s and prominent investors a free trip to an old coal mine.
short of that…