Of course the internet does not route in "as the crow flies" lines like this is showing. There is routing.
I do find myself trying to remember what the missile command sounds were...
One of my favorites when it came out. Clip doesn't show the opening though with the sound of the cities being put into place which they should do for the countries being setup.
oh here is a mame version with sounds http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=we4lY-GEzMk
The real arcade version had this big heavy trackball that was fun to use - thought it would be the future of computer interfaces but we went with mice instead after a decade.
If it's effective to tie up sufficient resources (similar times as hacking into what the honeypots are actually mimicing) then this could be deployed as an actual form of ECM against malicious attacks.
The main issue would be you're either protecting no one or everyone. So you either need to get governments behind you, or you need to get ISPs behind you.
If an organization could get an ISP to let them use their unused IP's in their honeypots and sufficiently reduced DDOS against their paying business customers, it would be very lucrative.
With the amount of business I've heard getting hit by ransomware, and hit by DDOS's for ransom. I'm sure a lot would willingly opt for a 10% increase in their internet costs to reduce the amount of attacks.
It wouldn't take long for word to get out that a certain ISP's IP block is full of honey pots and thus less profitable to hit and it would be more effective as a deterrent than as an actual tool - it's like having an alarm company sticker on your house window, you're automatically out of the biggest break in category of the opportunistic thief. Doesn't even matter if you've got an alarm system or not.
If it includes scans - I'm surprised how few there are. (that's about as many as you'd get on 5 randomly created VMs) If it doesn't - I'm surprised how many active attacks there are.