I think this is a really bad idea unless paired with some regime that penalizes inappropiate use of alarms - and most societies don't treat noise pollution as a real problem. For example, people honk all the time even when there are no safety issues. Or have misconfigured home/car alarms. Outlawing using ANC for blocking "fake alarms" only makes the problem worse.
Can you explain this in more detail? It doesn't seem true on a first glance.
If you enable compression on ZFS that runs on top of dmcrypt volume, it will naturally happen before encryption (since dmcrypt is the lower layer). It's also unclear how it could be much faster, since dmcrypt generally is bottlenecked on AES-NI computation (https://blog.cloudflare.com/speeding-up-linux-disk-encryptio...), which ZFS has to do too.
SSH is actually really slow on high latency high bandwidth links (this is what HPN-SSH patches fix: https://www.psc.edu/hpn-ssh-home/hpn-ssh-faq). It's very apparent if you try running rsync between two datacenters on different contients.
HTTP/3 (and hopefully this project) does not have this problem.
You can imagine you are converting BTC to dollars right before purchase. If you had 1 BTC worth $1000 at the beginning of the year and then 6 months later (when it was worth $1500) bought something with it - you earned $500 in capital gains. (Not saying this is the current law, but that method seems to make sense)