neo wrote:
In other words, Linode will cancel services if you continue doing something which "prompts the receipt of abuse complaints", not if you "continue to do something illegal".
Why didn't you quote the whole paragraph? Here, I'll do it and I'll highlight the parts that explain the "prompts" part:
Quote:
Linode does not prohibit the use of distributed, peer to peer network services such as Tor, nor does Linode routinely monitor the network communications of customer Linodes as a normal business practice. However, customers are responsible for the contents of network traffic exiting their Linode. Any usage that prompts the receipt of abuse complaints pertaining to violation of United States and/or international copyright law must be promptly discontinued to avoid service cancellation for violation of these terms.
It means Linode can't know what you're doing unless:
1. They receive a complaint
2. They monitor your service, which probably means deep packet inspection because port number does not prove anything.
And they're not going to monitor because it is pointless, technically very difficult unless you're in business of monitoring traffic and would probably open a privacy violation pandora's box somewhere and somehow, if they did.
So yes, they rely on complaints to act upon. And no, don't twist the words, the TOS prohibits you from doing anything illegal, period.
I don't see how the other text in paragraph changes the meaning of the part I quoted. I never suggested Linode should monitor traffic, nor I suggested it should ignore complaints. I suggested it is wrong to treat continued "receipt of abuse complaints" by itself as grounds for termination, unless Linode looked into those complaints at least to some standard and assessed complaints to likely be valid. And Linode probably already does that, otherwise anyone would be able to bring down anyone else's site just by repeatedly sending Linode bogus complaints. So the question is: should Linode start treating complaints about TOR exit nodes as bogus, like other US hosting providers already do?