Haha!

If it’s against your AUP, make sure you have a clause in there that says you 
charge per incident.

Then go ahead and charge the customer.

Sounds like if you are just going to kick them off eventually, might as well 
try to keep them, but make it costly.

If they don’t pay it, then they are off.

Nothing legally wrong with it if its in your policy I think.

From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of That One Guy /sarcasm
Sent: Tuesday, February 2, 2016 10:57 AM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] DMCA Time Management Fee

Oh wow, youre seriously looking for a fight with customers

On Tue, Feb 2, 2016 at 11:31 AM, Jeremy 
<jeremysmi...@gmail.com<mailto:jeremysmi...@gmail.com>> wrote:
What do you thing about charging a fee every time that a customer gets a DMCA 
takedown notice.  These notices take time to track down and follow up on.  If 
we charged $20 every time it would make it not really worth it to pirate that 
$10 movie.  I would think that it should be legal, so long as we add it to our 
customer agreement.  Anyone ever thought about this?  Right now we pass on 5 of 
them and then make them find a new provider.  It seems like they would be less 
likely to hit 5 if they had to pay $20 for each one.  We really don't want 
these guys on our network anyway, so no sweat if they just cancel.  Is anyone 
out there charging customers a fee for these?  I know most of you just ignore 
them, but we like passing them on, as it lowers our overall usage.



--
If you only see yourself as part of the team but you don't see your team as 
part of yourself you have already failed as part of the team.

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