Re-reading the subscriber aggreement off the Code Red web page makes as clear as a glass of Guiness. ;-) By not explicitly disallowing servers you they allow people to run remote control software to push data up from work or other such thing that is not a generally known or listed server. If I run an experimental server to test some stuff and tell some friends about it or route some mail for family members the amount of traffic is not going to be signifcantly different than my "normal" browsing usage. If it gets to be a strain they can cut me down using the prohibited use clause sighted in the Code Red info. But this also would come into effect if I'm downloaded several gig of movies or other such data. Most likely I don't get caught unless the people in my area complain about speed and they trace a packet trail to my door. On Thursday 09 August 2001 17:32, you wrote: > The AT&T/Mediaone/RR AUP does(did?) not disallow servers, nor does it > reference other documents that do. AT&T at Home may be an entirely different > story. > > Dan > -- Jack Ungerleider jack at jacku.com