
"One of the biggest issues involved with becoming a web publisher is the question of hosting. With an internet clogged with false hosting review sites, hosting companies trying to rip you off, and hosting companies run by 14 year olds, the majority of web publishers are at the mercy of random chance when it comes to finding a quality host. To solve this huge problem and to grant freedom to all, we have come up with
75 extremely specific steps that will get you up and running with a *nix box (running FreeBSD), along with the most recent versions of Apache, Perl, PHP, and MySQL."
Member since:
2005-12-04
Ok, I'll concede that EULA was the wrong term, but come on! Just because you might not get caught doesn't make it right. The practice of knowingly breaking rules to which you agreed to operate by should not be condoned and is very much the reason why providers start making life so miserable by locking things down. I think it's one thing to have a web server for *personal* access only on a home ISP account that forbids web services for commercial purposes, but that's not what's being talked about here. The article specifically talks about being a web developer and having a secure space to host sites which implies (to me) public access sites. If I misread, I apologize.
I definately wouldn't judge anyone for doing this, but I don't think it should be publically condoned. And people wonder why ISPs start blocking ports! It's because people abuse them.