No service to anyone is very vague and is open to many loopholes. I know it's a far out there example but it could be interpreted to things like ICMP replies. It's pretty sad when a company decides how you can use the bandwith you are purchasing. While I understand why cable companies don't like bandwidth hogs I can't understand why they don't put safe gaurds inplace (like DSL services ... you have a max speed and can do what you want with it). Cheers, Ash --- Darkfire Secure Linux - http://www.gnulinux.net On Wed, 2002-07-10 at 19:41, bob wrote: > my 3 cents, Gnutella states USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. > Notice the incident ? Its a filesharing program which states in the COX AUP > that your to offer no service to anyone (ftp,http, napster ect...)
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Thu Jul 11 2002 - 09:07:59 PDT