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To insure that all customers of Cactus Internet Service have easy access to the Internet at a reasonable cost we must enforce policies that prevent a few people from hogging access or otherwise degrading the enjoyment of the Internet for everyone else. Each policy below is explained in detail with examples when applicable. Use of services from Cactus International, Inc. constitutes acceptance of these use policies which may change from time to time.
Engaging in practices that degrade the Internet, reduce the enjoyment of the Internet for other users and use of the Internet for illegal purposes are not acceptable. The following list is not complete, but indicates some of the activities than can result in having your account cancelled. Neither you nor anyone you allow to use your Internet account shall:
We define UNLIMITED ACCESS to mean that you may be on the Internet as often as you want for as long as you want PROVIDED you are actually sitting in front of the computer actively using it. Reason: Each dial-up access port to the Internet on our dial-up server costs about $92 per month. If everyone were to stay dialed-in 24 hours per day 7 days per week, then everyone would have to pay, say, $100 per month for Internet service. However, if people log-off the Internet when they are not actively using it, then (statistically) one dial-up access port will support 7 people with only a tiny chance of anyone getting a busy signal when they dial-up. Since our goal is to provide readily available access at a reasonable cost, we must insist that this Fair Use policy is observed. If this is unacceptable, we also offer dedicated access accounts that charge the full cost of 24 hour per day service, always on DSL broadband accounts or you may sign up with one of our competitors (we don't mind their services being degraded ;)
Implementation: Our dial-up server can detect when a dial-up port is
not in active use and hang up the line. Inactivity is called idle time and the server has an idle timeout of 30 minutes. We require that people
refrain from practices that defeat the idle timeout function of the server. This includes:
Consequences: Anyone refusing to observe this policy will have their account terminated.
As stated under Fair Use - Dial-up, the price is based on an expected 7 paying users per dial-up access line. Any use that changes that figure is unacceptable. We think that the following interpretation is fair:
Below are examples of unacceptable use:
Under no circumstances should you give your account information to a third party for their use.
Email and personal website accounts that show no sign of activity for a period of 90 days may be removed from the servers. Email accounts in particular may contain many 10's of MegaBytes of email from list groups and advertisements, placing an unnecessary burden on the servers. In a sample of 5000 email accounts we discovered that 35% of them had never been accessed. In determining whether a personal website is inactive, if the server logs show that no one, including the web site owner, has accessed any page on the web site for 90 days, it shall be considered inactive. In determining whether an email box is inactive, if the email box index shows that none of the messages have been read for a period of 90 days then the email address shall be considered inactive. Furthermore, we have noted that some people leave their read email on the email server. The email server is not to be used as storage for email that has already been read. Therefore, any email older than 60 days that has been read may be removed from the email server even if the the email account has been accessed in the last 60 days. If you are going on vacation and will not be able to access your email for an extended period of time, send an email to cactus@turbonet.com and a note will be entered into your account not to delete the email box. However, if the account becomes delinquent more than 60 days, the email box will be deleted.
The main difference between broadband and dial-up from the ISP's point of view is that the ISP can control exactly how many computers can dial up at a given time since it cannot exceed the number of modems he has. On the other hand, he can never know how many computers are using broadband at a given moment since they don't have to dial up. However, statistically, he can predict the number if his customers inform him of the number of computers each one has. An ISP knows his overhead and bandwidth costs, so he can accurately price his service based on the number of computers connected to his broadband service. A problem arises when his customers use connection sharing devices and report fewer computers than they actually have. These customers use more services than they are paying for and this increases the cost to all of the other customers who correctly reported the number of computers they have connected to the Internet. This is because under-reporting the number of computers makes it seem as if the average computer uses more resources than it actually does, so more is charged per reported computer to all customers.
Another problem for the ISP offering broadband is when a customer who needs a lot of bandwidth to support his or her business opts for a DSL broadband account rather than a private line. DSL broadband is
an inexpensive
shared
service where private line service is very expensive. The cost to this customer isn't less because DSL broadband is shared, the cost is less because the customer is shifting the
cost to the ISP and his other customers. Lastly, you might wonder why the charge for five computers isn't five times the charge for one? Part of this has to do with the fact that not all
costs are for bandwidth or proportional to the number of computers. For example, billing costs for one account is the same whether it is for one computer or 1000 computers. The same applies to rent, air
conditioning, and so on. Below are items intended to insure usage and charges are fair to all customers.
CACTUS INTERNATIONAL, INC. RESERVES THE RIGHT TO RESTRICT USER BANDWIDTH, DISCONNECT USERS AND CANCEL USER ACCOUNTS WITH OR WITHOUT NOTICE AND WITH OR WITHOUT CAUSE. |
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Cactus Computer Co. 211 S. Main St. Moscow, ID 83843 |
Copyright © 2004 Cactus International, Inc. |