On Fri, Mar 4, 2022 at 12:55 PM Martin Hannigan <hannigan@gmail.com> wrote:
I would argue they don't have much of a choice:
"The economic sanctions put in place as a result of the invasion and the increasingly uncertain security situation make it impossible for Cogent to continue to provide you with service."
I would expect to see others follow suit if that is the case.
That's an interesting slope to slide along...
I fully understand ISPs disconnecting customers for non-payment; we'veall had to do that at one point or another in our careers, I'm sure.However, that's generally done *after* the customer has demonstratedan inability or unwillingness to pay their bills.
This doesn't seem to indicate that any existing invoices have goneunpaid past their due date, but simply that there is *concern* that afuture bill might go unpaid due to the economic sanctions.
I'm not sure that's a good precedent for a service provider to create;"we may terminate your service at any point if we suspect that at anunspecified time in the future, you may become unable to pay futureinvoices."
Shades of Minority Report. We'll imprison you today for a crime wesuspect you will commit in the future. ^_^;
If and when bills go unpaid, I fully support turning off customers.I worry about the precedent of disconnecting based on suspicionsof what might happen in the future, however.
With sanctions, isn't there a possibility that they literally *can't* get paid? That is, they are running on free service as of now?
Mike