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Date: Tue, 17 Feb 2009 16:05:37 GMT
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Tue, 17 Feb 2009 16:05:37 GMT
Re: Re: Your Order

http://canword.com?Vftwx
























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Ignore all Below This Line Random Gibberish :)
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This is not the first time a replacement has been proposed for the current Internet. For example, modern Windows and Macintosh computers already come equipped to support a new Internet protocol known as IPv6 that would fix many of the shortcomings of the current IPv4 version. However, because of cost, performance and compatibility questions it has languished.

"In many respects we are probably worse off than we were 20 years ago," said Eugene Spafford, the executive director of the Center for Education and Research in Information Assurance and Security at Purdue University and a pioneering Internet security researcher, "because all of the money has been devoted to patching the current problem rather than investing in the redesign of our infrastructure."

