Re: Disasterbation

From: Anders Sandberg (nv91-asa@nada.kth.se)
Date: Tue Dec 17 1996 - 05:11:53 MST


On Tue, 17 Dec 1996, David Musick wrote:

> The idea of the Internet breaking down, due to an overload of messages, was
> brought up here. I began wondering: if the amount of information the
> Internet can handle at any given time is limited, then won't the price of
> sending a given amount of information through the Internet go up to match the
> demand for the limited resources?

This would happen if there was a functional pricing system of net
services, but as far as I know most networks use flat fees for a certain
bandwidth (that may or may not be used). And most networks have rather
fixed rates for the users.

I think the net could get clogged up here and there due to overloads
(especially if something got a lot of people online at the same time;
compare to telephone netwroks), but that would just lead to massive packet
losses and "trashing", which seems self limiting. A more interesting
danger is net-generated avalanches, such as the famous router breakdown in
the 80's.

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