pcg@cs.aber.ac.uk (Piercarlo Grandi) (12/17/90)
On 7 Dec 90 15:07:00 GMT, GD.WHY@FORSYTHE.STANFORD.EDU (Bill Yundt) said: WHY> I further remind all users of this mail list that it and WHY> the Internet access to it are intended for support of WHY> research and education and not purely commercial interests WHY> of the kind Mr. Booth is pursuing. Are you sure he was addressing the mailing list and not just the USENET newsgroup? The kind of query he makes is entirely within the accepted norms of behaviour for a USENET poster. There is a large number of equivalent articles in USENET, and so long as they have some interest for a wider readership (and surely the issue of KA9Q's copyright status is of interest to many) or they are small, they are within the bounds of accepted USENET practice. WHY> I believe his use of USENET-to-Internet mail for this purpose to be WHY> a violation of the Interim NSFNET use rules and am forwarding his WHY> communication and this note to NSF authorities for their WHY> information. Indeed any _site_ that redistributed this article on NSFNET lines is in violation of NSFNET rules, and a complaint should be lodged with their system administrators. The person involved is posting, I seem to understand, on a private system, and has no control on the transport resources chosen by gateways for distributing its postings. The Path: Path: aber-cs!gdt!dcl-cs!ukc!mcsun!sunic!uupsi!rpi !zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!jarthur !nntp-server.caltech.edu!quotron.com!todd tells us that it is Caltech that started the chain of violations of the NSFNET rules by not screening all communications passing thru them to reject those without education or research content. I would send a complaint to NSFNET about Caltech's (and subsequent nodes) gross disregard of the NSFNET rules, not about Mr. Booth's adherence to USENET rules, as you well say in: WHY> Those supplying mail-forwarding for this class of traffic are, in WHY> my opinion, in technical if not substantive violation of the WHY> applicable use rules. Ah yes, definitely yes. It is probably a duty of sites connected to the NSFNET to screen all mail and NNTP traffic passing thru them for the purpose of rejecting any traffic in substantive violation of the NSFNET guidelines, and the NSF should start immediately an investigation in the gross waste of federal money involved if this is not done. If I were in the USA, conforted by your opinion that *forwarding* the posting you refer to is technically in violation of the NSFNET rules, and that it has not been dropped by all the intermediate sites that have used federal funds to propagate it, and that probably none of them does it, I would write to my Representative Probably this abuse of federal funds. NSFNET sites that do not screen mail and news passing thru them and instead forward everything on NSF funded channels probably cost a large amount of money every year to the taxpayer. WHY> Bill Yundt WHY> Executive Director, Bay Area Regional Research Network WHY> Board Member, Federation of American Research Networks WHY> Director, Networking and Communication Systems, Stanford University Ah, just a curiosity, inquiring minds want to know. Are you *absolutely* sure that none of the Professors at Stanford uses NSFNET bandwidth to send or receive e-mail connect to private consultancies and similar purely commercial initiatives? I am sure that they are very careful about not making use of federally funded research resources for private gain in general. I am ready to agree that it is an internal matter for Stanford University to decide whether or not to screen all traffic originating from their Professors for possible violations of the NSFNET rules, or to rely on their unquestioned integrity instead. But maybe, a mere formality, of course, the NSF should insist (after all it is federal money -- the Secret Service, or the GAO may well become interested :->) instead on some auditing of the use of the NSFNET bandwidth, to make it clear that the traditional University practice that a certain amount of exploitation of University resources for private purposes, including for profit ones, is permissible, does not extend by default to NSFSNET resources, to which different and much stricter rules apply. For example, a Professor consulting and contacting his clients by e-mail from his University workstation, as it may well happen technically, may (I don't know really, I admit) be in this authorized by the University. But the University probably must then find alternate non NSFNET funded tranport channels for such e-mail, e.g. by using UUCP mail on commercial phone lines instead of SMTP mail over NSF funded TCP/IP connections. In other words, if the University (as I assume) allows staff (limited) use of its facilities for personal or for profit purposes, it must pay for this out of its own funds, not offload the expense onto federally funded resources which are intended for research or education. I guess that there are many and varied angles on such a simple issue as respecting the NSFNET guidelines. It would be interesting to explore tham all. -- Piercarlo Grandi | ARPA: pcg%uk.ac.aber.cs@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk Dept of CS, UCW Aberystwyth | UUCP: ...!mcsun!ukc!aber-cs!pcg Penglais, Aberystwyth SY23 3BZ, UK | INET: pcg@cs.aber.ac.uk