you're saying it's illegal to run an SSH server? that makes no sense.
On Mon, Jun 9, 2008 at 11:07 AM, Randolph Baden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Sorry everyone. I'm going to have to withdraw this, thanks to > something Charles pointed out: > > > I might warn anybody tempted to cooperate with this request to very > carefully check their terms-of-service agreements with ComCast to make sure > this is not prohibited behavior. > > I was so caught up in this that I didn't even think about that. > Running an SSH server alone is probably technically a violation of the > ComCast ToS. As much as I wish I could still do this, you're right, > I'm not going to be able to. Thanks for pointing this out. > > > Randolph, > > > > I'm a member of this list, and have Comcast, but have no servers running > at > > home. As you yourself stated, you are asking a lot, and even more when > one > > considers that you are a total unknown to the group. Perhaps if you were > to > > give more info for verification... Professors, sponsors, etc... that > people > > could communicate with to verify who you are, you might get a better > > response. I myself am not a UMD student (UMUC), but just a list member. > > > > Good luck with the research, it sounds interesting! > > > > Joe > > This is a great idea, and I feel a little foolish for not doing this > in my first e-mail. First of all, for information on me and a little > about my research, you can check out my university web page at > http://www.cs.umd.edu/~randofu <http://www.cs.umd.edu/%7Erandofu>. I'm > working on this with Bobby > Bhattacharjee and Mark Shayman. I'd appreciate it if you didn't send > them too many e-mails (since they're busy), especially since I've > realized this won't be possible. I'm just pointing this out because > even though I'm withdrawing it, I don't want anyone to think that I > was trying to do something shady. > > > I'm going to go look into the Comcast ToS and see what I can do about > this... Hopefully I can get around it somehow. >
