On Apr 25, 2019, at 09:10 , Mark Seiden <mis@seiden.com> wrote:

feeling cranky, are we, job?   (accusing an antispam expert of spamming on a mailing list by having too long a .sig?)
but it’s true!  anne runs the internet, and the rest of us (except for ICANN GAC representatives) all accept that. 

to actually try to make a more substantial point, i am quite curious how the AUPs of carriers try to disallow bandwidth resale while permitting
  • cybercafe operations and other “free wifi" (where internet service might be provided for patrons in a hotel or cafe)

Business internet contracts usually don’t prohibit resale, or, they place different limits on it. Residential contracts usually flat out prohibit it.
At least in theory, I would expect most cybercafe and other such operations to have a business class of service from the ISP.
  • wireless access point schemes where you make money or get credit for allowing use of your bandwidth (e.g. Fon)
For residential end users, it probably does violate the ToS, but it’s unlikely such violation would be easily detected or enforced.
  • other proxy services that use bandwidth such as tor exit nodes and openvpn gateways
Unless you’re doing something illegal or making money selling your bandwidth, most things like this probably aren’t technically violations of the ToS.
i suppose they could just try to disallow resale or allow on-premises use even if revenue is received.  the Fon business model seems pretty comparable to me.

I agree — I’m pretty sure that both the Fon model and the packetstream model are probably ToS violations for most residential services.

Fon is unlikely to get noticed by most ISPs.

Packetstream seems a lot more risky, IMHO.

Owen

On Apr 24, 2019, 10:51 PM -0700, Job Snijders <job@instituut.net>, wrote:
Dear Anne,

On Wed, Apr 24, 2019 at 11:07:51PM -0600, Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. wrote:
How can this not be a violation of the ToS of just about every major provider?

Can you perhaps cite ToS excerpts from one or more major providers to
support your assertion?

Anne P. Mitchell,
Attorney at Law
GDPR, CCPA (CA) & CCDPA (CO) Compliance Consultant
Author: Section 6 of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law)
Legislative Consultant
CEO/President, Institute for Social Internet Public Policy
Board of Directors, Denver Internet Exchange
Board of Directors, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop
Legal Counsel: The CyberGreen Institute
Legal Counsel: The Earth Law Center
California Bar Association
Cal. Bar Cyberspace Law Committee
Colorado Cyber Committee
Ret. Professor of Law, Lincoln Law School of San Jose
Ret. Chair, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop

Are you listing all the above because you are presenting a formal
position supported by all these organisations about ToS? Can you for
instance clarify how signing of as a director for the Denver Internet
Exchange shapes the context of your ToS message?

Or, perhaps you are listing the above for some kind of self-marketing
purposes? If that is the case, please note that it is fairly uncommon to
use the NANOG mailing list to distribute resumes. I know numerous
websites dedicated to the dissemination of work histories, perhaps you
can use those instead of operational mailling list?

Regards,

Job

ps. RFC 3676 section 4.3