The original PRL article is Hiura et. al. Volume 86, No. 9 pp. 1733-1736. Some may have access to PRL online at: http://prl.aps.org/ This is a little more technical, but still worth a look.
This case is also discussed in today's SF Chronicle.
Article Here. Also mentioned is an older case where "anonymous Web pages linked the town's
weekly newspaper to lesbian pornography sites
and called a columnist a child molester, the
paper's editors traced the site to a former city
councilman by using a subpoena to obtain
records from Santa-Clara based Yahoo."
This seems to be like asking "How many numbers are there?" The limiting factor is going to be the bandwith resolution of the transmitters/recievers. An electrical engineer could probably intelligently comment on what limits that.
I left out the first author - Reuven Cohen. My apologies.
A recent contribution on this very topic appeared in Physical Review Letters on April 16 2001.
Breakdown of the Internet under Intentional Attack
Keren Erez,1 Daniel ben-Avraham,2 and Shlomo Havlin1
Volume 86, Issue 16 pp. 3682-3685
Worth checking out. Pretty readable.
The original PRL article is Hiura et. al. Volume 86, No. 9 pp. 1733-1736. Some may have access to PRL online at: http://prl.aps.org/ This is a little more technical, but still worth a look.
This case is also discussed in today's SF Chronicle. Article Here. Also mentioned is an older case where "anonymous Web pages linked the town's weekly newspaper to lesbian pornography sites and called a columnist a child molester, the paper's editors traced the site to a former city councilman by using a subpoena to obtain records from Santa-Clara based Yahoo."
Er... 60-70nm would be considered well in the X-Ray region of the spectrum. I sincerely doubt that a DVD player uses this.
This seems to be like asking "How many numbers are there?" The limiting factor is going to be the bandwith resolution of the transmitters/recievers. An electrical engineer could probably intelligently comment on what limits that.