Bill Becker wrote:
On Sat, 22 Aug 1998, Steve Davies wrote:
ISPs sell customers a TCP/IP connection to the Internet. To me that means taking my IP datagrams and delivering them to where I address them. I don't see that filtering of outbound traffic is part of such a product,
Fair enough.
Depends on the ISP. We not NOT offer total IP access on our dialup accounts. We reserve the right to restrict and filter any IP packets that do not conform with the services we offer. These include: 1. IP packets addressed with a source address other than the address assigned to the dialup connection 2. IP packets addressed to a known LAN broadcast address 3. IP packets addressed to multicast addresses 4. IP packets addressed to private addresses other than those we offer to our customers 5. IP packets targeted to deny or disrupt service to us or anyone else 6. IP packets transmitted for the purpose of committing a crime or to otherwise gain illegal entry or access 7. IP packets addressed to port 25 of any SMTP other than the SMTP servers we offer. 8. IP packets received from services known to cause harm, or support the causing of harm, to our services and to our customers. We also reserve the right to withdraw any other services at any time, and without notification to customers that have not notified us that they are using that service, where such withdrawal of service is in the best interests of our total overall service offering. -- Phil Howard | w8x1y9z5@dumb1ads.net die4spam@spammer4.edu end7it83@dumb5ads.com phil | end0ads6@no02ads4.org a5b0c9d6@no2where.com stop5it7@no82ads3.com at | w5x9y5z7@noplace7.org stop9510@no4place.com die3spam@lame0ads.org ipal | ads3suck@nowhere3.edu suck7it7@nowhere9.com stop4000@no6where.com dot | no17ads2@lame0ads.com no5spam5@nowhere2.org blow5me9@no0where.net net | eat54me1@nowhere4.net crash951@no7where.com stop4618@spam5mer.org