[88863] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: Quarantine your infected users spreading malware

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Larry Smith)
Tue Feb 21 11:38:36 2006

From: Larry Smith <lesmith@ecsis.net>
To: nanog@merit.edu
Date: Tue, 21 Feb 2006 10:38:04 -0600
In-Reply-To: <924f29280602210826g2b573127qcc726d4c932dc8f@mail.gmail.com>
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu


On Tuesday 21 February 2006 10:26, Jason Frisvold wrote:
> On 2/21/06, Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu <Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu> wrote:
> > Oddly enough, AOL and several other large providers seem to have no
> > problems advertising some variant on 'free A/V software'.
>
> Key words there.. "Large Provider" ..  I don't think A/V companies
> have any interest whatsoever in smaller providers..  Just not a big
> enough customer base I guess...
>
> It would be nice to see an A/V provider willing to take that first
> step and offer something like this to providers, regardless of size.
> No packaging needed, so there's a cost savings there for the vendor.
>
> I'm not familiar with how this works in AOL land..  Does the end-user
> need to subscribe to anything other than AOL?  ie, are there any
> "hidden" fees?
>

The problem with discussing AOL and "large provider" in the same sentence is 
that the complete AOL (connection, desktop, tools, etc) function are AOL 
controlled (walled garden) so they have the capability of doing much more in 
that arena that other providers.

Secondly, to the best of my knowledge,  A/V vendors do make their products 
available to "any" provider - it is just that small to medium sized ISP's 
cannot justify the cost/benefit ratio and keep their pricing anywhere near 
competitive with the "big" boys.  At ten copies a month you get little to no 
discount - at 10,000 copies per month you get quite a cut...

-- 
Larry Smith
SysAd ECSIS.NET
sysad@ecsis.net



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