"in connection with the Everest cable modem recreational service". Pretty much the residental service. Business service on the other hand might have a whole other AUP for their business services. Road Runner has almost the same AUP, but a whole different one for their business services. Leonard, Phil said: > Hmm...from the Everest Acceptable Use Policy it seems that servers are > prohibited: > > Customer may not run a server in connection with the Everest cable > modem recreational service, nor may Customer provide network services > to others via the Everest cable modem service. Examples of prohibited > programs include, but are not limited to, mail or simple mail transfer > protocol (smtp) server, http server, ftp server, internet relay chat > (irc) server, dynamic host control protocol (dhcp) servers, domain name > servers (dns), news or nntp servers and multi-user interactive forums. > > Philip > > -----Original Message----- > From: B. Liggett [mailto:brad@liggett.org] > Sent: Thursday, April 03, 2003 5:24 PM > To: Leonard, Phil; kclug@kclug.org > Subject: Re: Everest Residential Service > > > Since I'm the one that assigns them, I'll answer. > > Yes we offer them. $12.95 per IP, per month. 5 IP maximum. The > restrictions are a gray area. You may use the IPs as you wish, but > please be mindful of the Acceptable Use Policy. > > Brad > > > >> Does anybody know if Everest offers static IP's to residential >> subscribers > and if so do they have any restrictions on running servers on those > connections? >> >> Philip >> >> >> >> majordomo@kclug.org Enter without the quotes in body of message > > > >