This is one of those threads where I do think folk would benefit from hearing from the horses' mouths. In a recent bio of musk published this past week, the author claimed that starlink withdrew service over crimea based on the knowledge it was going to be used for a surprise attack. Starlink - and that author - now state that ( https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1700345943105638636 )The onus is meaningfully different if I refused to act upon a request from Ukraine vs. made a deliberate change to Starlink to thwart Ukraine. At no point did I or anyone at SpaceX promise coverage over Crimea. Moreover, our terms of service clearly prohibit Starlink for offensive military action, as we are a civilian system, so they were again asking for something that was expressly prohibited. SpaceX is building Starshield for the US government, which is similar to, but much smaller than Starlink, as it will not have to handle millions of users. That system will be owned and controlled by the US government.Furthermore, Musk stated yesterday that had the request come from the us government, he would have complied.I will refrain from editorializing.On Thu, Sep 14, 2023 at 5:56 AM Aaron de Bruyn via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> wrote:Starlink isn't a monopoly. Ukraine could have guided their munitions with Iridium or another satellite Internet system.Don't forget GLONASS. 😉On Thu Sep 14, 2023, 03:10 AM GMT, William Herrin wrote:On Wed, Sep 13, 2023 at 5:47 PM Michael Thomas <mike@mtcc.com> wrote:Doesn't this bump up against common carrier protections?
Hi Michael,
Internet providers aren't common carriers. If they were, it'd be
unlawful to stop your customers from sending email spam that was
merely offensive rather than illegal. It's also why Internet providers
aren't required to follow network neutrality. Internet providers gain
their immunity through section 230 and the DMCA instead.
Common carrier status typically applies to shipping companies and
basic telephone service. Part of the mess with unwanted phone calls is
that the caller has to break the law (e.g. by calling a number on the
do-not-call list) before the phone company is allowed to act against
them.I sure don't
want my utilities weaponizing their monopoly status to the whims of any
random narcissist billionaire.
Starlink isn't a monopoly. Ukraine could have guided their munitions
with Iridium or another satellite Internet system.
That said, volunteering services to the military of a nation at war
and then pulling the rug out from under them is so classless, one
wonders if Musk isn't trying to build a communist utopia.
Regards,
Bill Herrin
--
William Herrin
bill@herrin.us
https://bill.herrin.us/--Dave Täht CSO, LibreQos