jluetjen |
11-20-2006 11:16 AM |
Quote:
Originally posted by masraum
If we could get all of the junk email cut down I have to think that we'd see a difference in the internet either in speed or cost or both.
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Interesting. The company that I used to work for made a critical component for routers and switches -- key parts of the internet infrastructure. Curiously, as of 5 to 7 years ago the internet infrastructure was massively overbuilt, so that the available capacity was exponentially greater then the demand. Admittedly, this wasn't always true in the "last mile" prior to the end user. But the economic result of this over capacity was the expected crash in the industry -- which happened.
I'm not engineer, but my economics background would suggest that I kind of doubt that the reduction in spam is going to make a measurable impact on internet throughput in the global scheme of things. To put it a different way, since the capacity is more then ample, a reduction in demand (ie. spam) will not cause a reduction in price -- since the infrastructure costs will remain the same. It might increase the speed somewhat, but since capacity is not limiting the speed in many cases, it will most likely have less of an impact that you'd hope. I know that I can get emails from the far side of the world (with big attachments) in a matter of seconds to a minute or two, based on a simultaneous telephone conversation. In many cases the biggest delay is my outgoing anti-virus software, or my incoming receive frequency.
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