|
|
|
|
|
by jMyles
776 days ago
|
|
It's your job to separate the wheat from the chaff at the boundary of your network interface. In fact, personal boundaries of all sorts, from informational to emotional to physical to economic, are of paramount importance in the information age. Nobody (and certainly not the state) is going to erect your personal boundaries for you by ensuring justice in the face of spammy text messages (or, for that matter, hypnotic and manipulative social media). This is your job - maybe your most important job. Just as its your job to protect your personal health and safety. Nobody (and certainly not the state) is going to do that for you. Is there something about the trajectory of evolution of the internet that suggests to you that this is incorrect? I observe continually (seemingly perpetually) increasing traffic, and continually (seemingly perpetually) increasing capacity for general purpose computing. I also observe enormous empathy and cyberpunk traditions in our communities, protecting each other. Do my eyes and ears deceive me? |
|
Being a good neighbor requires restraining oneself and making requests with consideration for the other party.
Full disclosure: I worked for a price monitoring service that prided itself on crawling up to every 3 hours. Steps were always taken to mitigate the impact. Sometimes even asking hosts to allow-list the crawlers.