Obviously violates every standard “don’t resell the service” clause. ( But these are also the same TOSes that tell me I can’t VPN into the office , so they can pound sand. :p )
Doing this makes about as much sense as running a TOR exit node to me. Too much exposure to someone doing something dumb through you that you’d be left holding the bag for. On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 01:10 Anne P. Mitchell, Esq. <amitch...@isipp.com> wrote: > Just ran into packetstream.io: > > "Sell Your Unused Bandwidth > > Earn passive income while you sleep > > PacketStream is the first of its kind peer-to-peer proxy network. > Packeters are compensated for sharing bandwidth on the PacketStream network > and allowing users all over the world have access to content on the > internet through our secure network. Customers can purchase bandwidth and > browse the web from residential IPs to protect their browsing privacy. > > The PacketStream network routes customer traffic through PacketStream > users allowing for increased privacy and access to geo-restricted content > while browsing the web. Packeters on the PacketStream network share their > bandwidth with PacketStream customers. The website/service receiving HTTP > requests sees requests coming from real residential IPs and allows access > to content that would otherwise be blocked if it had been requested from > traditional datacenter VPNs or proxy networks." > > How can this not be a violation of the ToS of just about every major > provider? > > Anne > > Anne P. Mitchell, > Attorney at Law > GDPR, CCPA (CA) & CCDPA (CO) Compliance Consultant > Author: Section 6 of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law) > Legislative Consultant > CEO/President, Institute for Social Internet Public Policy > Board of Directors, Denver Internet Exchange > Board of Directors, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop > Legal Counsel: The CyberGreen Institute > Legal Counsel: The Earth Law Center > California Bar Association > Cal. Bar Cyberspace Law Committee > Colorado Cyber Committee > Ret. Professor of Law, Lincoln Law School of San Jose > Ret. Chair, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop > > > > >