Great... someone brought up Net Neutrality. I guess it's time to unsubscribe 
from the list for a few days until the shit show disappears. 




----- 
Mike Hammett 
Intelligent Computing Solutions 
http://www.ics-il.com 

Midwest-IX 
http://www.midwest-ix.com 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Tom Beecher" <beec...@beecher.cc> 
To: "Matthew Kaufman" <matt...@matthew.at> 
Cc: "J. Hellenthal via NANOG" <nanog@nanog.org> 
Sent: Friday, April 26, 2019 8:44:29 AM 
Subject: Re: Packetstream - how does this not violate just about every 
provider's ToS? 


And that is the conundrum here I think. It's very difficult (for me) to 
reconcile "NET NEUTRALITY!! PROVIDERS SHOULD BE DUMB PIPES!" with "Hey 
providers, this company is trying to do something sketchy, you should take 
action to stop it from working." 


Reselling bandwidth/access to your residential internet connection isn't (to my 
knowledge) breaking any criminal LAWS. It's only violating the ToS between you 
and your provider, to which they have a remedy of canceling your account if 
they decide to. (Maybe there's civil action there? I dunno.) So for anything 
not violating laws I'm not sure I want ISPs interfering with traffic at all. 


On the flip side, maybe ISPs can be pragmatic about this, and send warnings to 
people who may start using this..."service". Give them a heads up that they 
appear to be doing something that is in violation of the ToS, and if they 
continue, their account might be canceled. Be a nicer method than just 0 to 
canceled in one go. 


On Fri, Apr 26, 2019 at 8:12 AM Matthew Kaufman < matt...@matthew.at > wrote: 








On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 1:09 PM Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. < amitch...@isipp.com > 
wrote: 

<blockquote>


> On Apr 25, 2019, at 1:41 PM, Tom Beecher <beec...@beecher.cc> wrote: 
> 
> It seems like just another example of liability shifting/shielding. I'll 
> defer to Actual Lawyers obviously, but the way I see it, Packetstream doesn't 
> have any contractual or business relationship with my ISP. I do. If I sell 
> them my bandwidth, and my ISP decides to take action, they come after me, not 
> Packetstream. I can plead all I want about how I was just running "someone 
> else's software" , but that isn't gonna hold up, since I am responsible for 
> what is running on my home network, knowingly or unknowingly. 

And *that* is *exactly* my concern. Because those users...('you' in this 
example)...they have *no idea* it is causing them to violate their ToS/AUP with 
their provider. 

And this in part, is my reason for bringing it up here in NANOG - because (at 
least some of) those big providers are here. And those big providers are in the 
best position to stamp this out (if they think that it needs stamping out). 


<blockquote>

</blockquote>



So providers should stamp this out (because it is “bad”) and support customers 
who are running TOR nodes (because those are “good”). Did I get that right? 


Matthew Kaufman 
<blockquote>


</blockquote>

</blockquote>

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