> So let's break this up into two questions:
> 
> First, is the entity that forms the overlay the one that decides what
> goes in it?
> 
> I would say the answer to this is clearly yes.  I hope we can agree on
> that, subject to the second question.
> 
> Second question is whether that entity can decide that what they
> really want to do is support an anything-goes overlay?
> 

I'm afraid there is a fundamental difference here between what we are saying.  
Unfortunately, my answer to your first (and second) question(s) is no.  

Going back to my Internet analogy, the entity providing identities and 
credentials to access the overlay may be entirely different from the one or 
more entities that may be providing services on the overlay.  Clubbing the two 
is analogous to saying that the entity that provides me with an IP address 
today gets to tell me what applications or web sites to access on my laptop.  
Certainly, that would be undesirable.  Even in the mobile market, things are 
going the other way.  What applications run on the iPhone or the GPhone are not 
really determined by the operator any more (of course, outside the North 
American market, this has been true for a while now).  

An overlay configuration document handled by the overlay provider must not have 
anything to do with kinds or usages on the overlay which may be coming from 
various services offered on the overlay from different providers. Otherwise, we 
are creating a model which is going to limit deployment options and I don't 
think our intent here is to create a walled garden for overlays. 

Best,
Vidya 
_______________________________________________
P2PSIP mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/p2psip

Reply via email to