|
|
|
|
|
by b_t_s
2524 days ago
|
|
Netflix is providing a service. It's on their computer. They are certainly entitled to terminate your access to it. Logging into someone else's AWS account and deleting their stuff is, in the eyes of the law, more akin to Netflix breaking into your house and stealing your TV to stop you watching Netflix when your credit card payment is declined. Or remotely formatting all your computers to make sure you can no longer access your Netflix account. That is not the correct legal path to remedy the problem....it's a felony. It's all well and good to play hardball with people who are not paying you, but the correct way to do that is with lawyers. If you commit a felony first, then they can tell you to go pound sand and your choices are now (a) pound sand or (b) Get your 2 grand or whatever was owed, pay half of it the the lawyer, and then go to jail when they report you to the police out of spite. |
|
Can you program in some code to display on the website “this website owner needs to pay for their site” etc.
and if they don’t pay you, you don’t disable it. And it activates after a while. Plus it would have redundant things so they can’t easily just hire one guy to remove it.
Or it could be some thing that breaks the site in a less obvious way and they call you to fix it.
It doesn’t seem to break any laws that I know of. Do you?