Please reference any suit regarding breach of contract. Examples abound. Port filtering may be construed as a material breach when the expectation is, that there is to be no port filtering. Access is access, even when the customer doesn't know that they are being restricted in their access. That just assures you that they will go ballistic when they find out. Face it guys, you KNOW that this is basically dishonest. As such, it is indefensible. I would almost bet <amount> that none of the transit providers mentions restrictions, on access, in their contracts. I would almost bet <1/2 amount> that NONE of the access providers mention same in THEIR contracts. The general expectation is for clear and open pipes. Put such restiction into your contracts and you will lose customers. Don't put them in and start filtering anyway and you will lose court cases...big ones.
-----Original Message----- From: Shawn McMahon [mailto:smcmahon@eiv.com] Sent: Monday, November 20, 2000 7:21 PM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: Re: ISPs as content-police or method-police
On Mon, Nov 20, 2000 at 12:03:57PM -0500, Christian Kuhtz wrote:
What doesn't make sense in that argument is why you
upsell the customer to a managed fw solution etc if that's
Educate them, and let them decide based on the education
couldn't just simply the concern. they received.
Because it doesn't just affect them; it affects you, your customers, and your business.
I wouldn't be so sure, particularly because of the legal exposure...
Does anybody have a live example of this supposed legal exposure, to counter all the many examples those of us who don't believe in it have given?