An Education In Deep Packet Inspection
Deep Packet Inspection, or DPI, is at the heart of the debate over Network Neutrality — this relatively new technology threatens to upset the balance of power among consumers, ISPs, and information suppliers. An anonymous reader notes that the Canadian Privacy Commissioner has published a Web site, for Canadians and others, to educate about DPI technology. Online are a number of essays from different interested parties, ranging from DPI company officers to Internet law specialists to security professionals. The articles are open for comments. Here is the CBC's report on the launch.
It's a hacky technology to implement QOS because folks don't like setting the QOS bits and protocol in the headers. Usually because some Microsoft firewall only allows http on port 80 (;-))
It's the use of it by the famous "men of good will but little understanding" that is bad, plus of course the use of it by men of ill will.
--dave
davecb@spamcop.net
How would the authorities like to be deep inspected?
That's a good question.
This summary mentions education about deep packet inspection. To me that's a very simple thing that boils down to a few questions:
Do you want your ISP and potential unknown/unaccountable parties to be able to easily monitor, intercept, and record some or all of your Internet traffic? Do you want profiles built on this information that will compromise your privacy and could be used to serve advertisements or to micromanage your Internet usage? Do you feel like QoS, which will be the given reason/excuse, is such a good and desirable thing that it's worth all of these disadvantages?
Like so many things that are not the result of overwhelming customer demand, this is a bad idea that is open to all sorts of abuse.
It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
D.I. is neither good or bad, it is the illegal or immoral application of the technology that is the problem. I really am amazed that no-one on a technology site noted that the heart of the debate on net neutrality is free speech, not deep inspection.
Doesn't a good encryption system stop DPI from giving any useful information?
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
it's just going to push more and more protocols to use TLS wrappers and to use random "legit looking" ports (like 20, 21, 80, 443, 110), a la Skype and most IM clients nowadays
Good luck deep inspecting that crap
it's just going to push more and more protocols to use TLS wrappers and to use random "legit looking" ports (like 20, 21, 80, 443, 110), a la Skype and most IM clients nowadays Good luck deep inspecting that crap
That's true. You'd think that "spam vs anti-spam measures" alone or "windows viruses vs windows virus scanners" alone would have taught us, by now, how to recognize an arms race when we're about to start one. This is what I mean when I say that our culture does not value foresight.
It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein