The 44 address space is worth $300,000,000 (per Amazon buyer).
If it is limited to radio transmitters, we should sell it and rebuild using
private (RFC1918) address space on a VPN, and put the money in a trust for
amateur radio development and defense.
If it is being used for on air, plus infrastructure (voip linking, web
sites, databases, DNS, data links, ...) then keeping all or part of the
address space with direct Internet routing makes sense.
On Mon, May 6, 2019 at 2:20 PM Jay Nugent <jjn(a)nuge.com> wrote:
Greetings,
On Mon, 6 May 2019, Roger Andrews wrote:
Rob, Sorry, I forgot to say which site:
separs.ampr.org
<http://separs.ampr.org/>.
WHy does this website NEED to reside within the 44net? Can it not
have
TWO entries in DNS, one on 44 and the other on the Public Internet, and
have TWO interfaces - one on EACH network. DNS can and does answer with
MULTIPLE addresses, ya know. In that way it can be indexed like any
ordinary website *AND* you don't allow Spiders to crawl all over what is
meant to be an Amateur Radio ONLY address space where licensed
transmitters should NEVER be keyed up by unliscensed persons or machines.
We see more and more of this "bluring" of the edges of the network
that
many of us depend upon to NOT allow non-Hams onto. Why use 44Net
addresses for non-radio links or services?????
--- Jay WB8TKL
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John D. Hays
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