I've been nibbling around the edges of GNU and OSDN trying to find a project that focuses on lawyers working for nonprofits --- OpenOffice is terrific, but I still didn't find any specific poverty lawyer projects.
When I saw this excerpt, I wondered whether there was a more mundane sort of link that covered more routine and basic regulatory issues for small web hosting companies who deal with large telcos.
For example, if a spammer successfully sends spam through a small web hosting company's mail server across the circuits of several large telcos, may any or all of the telcos respond by blocking ALL traffic to and from the entire mail server from its ciruits?
Is doing so be fair or unfair? (i.e., worth it to get rid of the spam?)
What procedural mechanisms exist to resolve any disputes which cannot be resolved informally?
The FTC and related agencies are available for consumer complaints but what about small companies?
I've been nibbling around the edges of GNU and OSDN trying to find a project that focuses on lawyers working for nonprofits --- OpenOffice is terrific, but I still didn't find any specific poverty lawyer projects.
When I saw this excerpt, I wondered whether there was a more mundane sort of link that covered more routine and basic regulatory issues for small web hosting companies who deal with large telcos. For example, if a spammer successfully sends spam through a small web hosting company's mail server across the circuits of several large telcos, may any or all of the telcos respond by blocking ALL traffic to and from the entire mail server from its ciruits? Is doing so be fair or unfair? (i.e., worth it to get rid of the spam?) What procedural mechanisms exist to resolve any disputes which cannot be resolved informally? The FTC and related agencies are available for consumer complaints but what about small companies?