+1  in THEORY the original question sounds well, in PRACTICE it is quite different.


Norbert


On 5/17/2012 14:09, David Cake wrote:
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On 17/05/2012, at 1:42 PM, Horacio T. Cadiz wrote:

On 05/16/2012 08:43 AM, David Cake wrote:
I've suggested previously that the only reason alternate roots have
failed in the past is that none of them have got significant user
share, and that Pirate bay/The Pirate party is one of the few groups
that could probably provide impetus for a significant uptake.
 Why do you think Pirate Bay would gain more traction than
the other alternate roots? What makes them different from
AlterNIC and the like?
	A very small percentage of the population care about DNS, and even know what AlterNIC is.
	A much larger percentage of the population care about access to pirated media, and know what Pirate Bay is.
	Or to put it another way - does anyone think it likely that AlterNIC, or other alternate roots, would ever have their own political party, that actually gets members elected in several countries? 
	Cheers
		David
	

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Norbert Klein

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