Network Working Group                                         S. Crocker
Request for Comments: 1776                               CyberCash, Inc.
Category: Informational                                     1 April 1995


                      The Address is the Message

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
  does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
  this memo is unlimited.

Discussion

  Declaring that the address is the message, the IPng WG has selected a
  packet format which includes 1696 bytes of address space.  This
  length is a multiple of 53 and is completely compatible with ATM
  architecture.  Observing that it's not what you know but who you
  know, the IPng focused on choosing an addressing scheme that makes it
  possible to talk to everyone while dispensing with the irrelevant
  overhead of actually having to say anything.

  Security experts hailed this as a major breakthrough.  With no
  content left in the packets, all questions of confidentiality and
  integrity are moot.  Intelligence and law enforcement agencies
  immediately refocused their efforts to detect who's talking to whom,
  and are silently thankful they can avoid divisive public debate about
  key escrow, export control and related matters.

  Although the IPng WG declared there should be more than enough
  address space for everyone, service providers immediately began vying
  for reserved portions of the address space.

Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.














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RFC 1776               The Address is the Message           1 April 1995


Author's Address

  Steve Crocker
  CyberCash, Inc.
  2086 Hunters Crest Way
  Vienna, VA 22181

  Phone: +1 703 620 1222
  EMail: [email protected]










































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