On Jun 10, 2004, at 2:06 PM, Laurence F. Sheldon, Jr. wrote:
The "victim" in the case Sean posted knew he had a worm, got some of his first bill forgiven, yet did nothing to correct it and acts surprised when the same thing happens the next month. YES, he is at fault. Anyone who thinks differently .. uh .. can I buy b/w from you? :) Oh, and since you feel responsible, I'm only going to pay for the amount of traffic I think I should have gotten on my web page, even if I get /.'ed or something. Does $25/Mbps sound good? I plan to use about 1 Mbps, but I will need an un-rate-limited GigE connection.
It all depends upon what the agreement between the customer and the ISP says. It's no unreasonable for the ISP to 'insure' the customer against risks he isn't able to mitigate which the ISP is, even if that means shutting off his service. If someone blows up my water line and $1,000,000 worth of water is wasted, I don't think the water company is going to expect me to pay for it. This is especially true if the water company knew about the leak, could have done something to mitigate it, and failed to do so. Even if that means shutting off my water, that's what I'd expect them to do, shut it off until someone fixes it. Most of the people on this list see things from the ISP's perspective. However, step back a bit and see it from the user's perspective. Do you expect to pay for phone calls you didn't make or do you expect the person whose deliberate conscious action caused those calls to be made? Do you expect to be responsible for patrolling your electric lines to make sure someone hasn't plugged into your outside outlets? For most classes of service, it makes the most sense to only charge the customer for the traffic he wants and have the ISP take the responsibility for dealing with attacks to the extent they can do so. This is because the customer can't afford to hire a full time person to guard his always-on DSL connection while he's away for two weeks but his ISP can. This may mean that you're disconnected until they can coordinate with you -- such is life. Just be aware, your customers may not have the same expectations you do, and you should make your understanding *very* clear to your customers in your contracts. DS