- An anonymity service can be viewed as a "public good." A public good is something that everyone can use without diminishing someone else's ability to use it. Street lights are a classic example.
- In most public good scenarios, "free-riding" (using the good without paying for it) is a problem. In anonymity systems, free riders can also be good, since they provide cover traffic.
- You're more anonymous as a node than as a free-riding user.
- Parties that value anonymity highly have good reason to become nodes, despite the higher costs. Everyone else might as well just use the system.
- More nodes means less traffic per node, means less anonymity.
- It appears difficult to set up an anonymity system that everyone will have an incentive to use, particularly if you're starting from scratch.
Pages
▼
Saturday, December 1, 2007
On "On the economics of anonymity"
Since posting "On the economics of anonymity", I ran across a paper of the same title. Being an actual research paper, it goes into considerably more depth than my brief take. Some of the high points:
No comments:
Post a Comment