On Tue, Mar 1, 2022 at 10:38 AM Crist Clark <cjc+nanog@pumpky.net> wrote:
So they’re going to offer the service to anyone in a denied area for free somehow? How do you send someone a bill or how do they pay it if you can’t do business in the country?

It's not like Google is billing anyone for using 8.8.8.8 et al.
[for those who immediately respond "this is SpaceX, not Google, 
remember, Google already put a billion dollars into the company 
to purchase 10% ownership of it; contributing another billion to 
fund service to Ukraine wouldn't be beyond their means by any 
stretch.]

Besides, it could be a great "free now, but 6 months after an 
armistice is signed, you can cancel the service and return the 
dish, or start paying our regular monthly service fee" type 
situation. 

I mean, if starlink offered you free service for N months, and 
then at the end, you had to choose to return the dish or start 
paying the monthly fee, how likely are you to give it up once 
you've gotten used to using it every day?

If we really want to get creative, there's always the carbon offsets 
model for industry.  We could create incentive structures for 
global companies to buy "democracy credits" through donations 
like that, which would offset a similar amount of latitude in doing 
business within authoritarian regions.  That way, if you donate 
a billion dollars worth of service to support freedom and democracy 
in Ukraine, we'll collectively look the other way if you use slave 
Uyghur labour to assemble a billion dollars worth of CPE.  

In short--there's lots of ways this could work out, beyond a simple 
"let's just give it away for free forever" model.   ^_^

Matt