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by manquer
880 days ago
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In this case they are actually losing money not gaining by allowing this kind of abuse, both because the bandwidth usage costs money and also because of potential lost billing from other services which now is not billed. The Lightsail style billing model works same way shared vs leased lines works, if everyone fully used their max allocation it won't be possible to offer service at that price point. They can offer 2TB or 4TB for price because the usage modelling of target users supported that. No company wants a customer to bypass their usage and pricing ToS even if they are not actively enforcing it, it is lost revenue and/or bringing in customers who you don't really want. |
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Your statement here is absolutely correct (we are in agreement); it is also absolutely orthogonal to what I (and others) have said.
Let me use an analogy.
Marijuana is illegal in most states of the US (and, federally, it is still a controlled substance). And yet a (relatively) recent survey[1] showed that around 7% of respondents grew marijuana at home.
How is this possible? Shouldn't that be 0%? It's almost like the DEA is slacking off or something.
... or maybe it's because they can't practicably round up each and every one these people: the DEA isn't omniscient, and given the 4th amendment they can't ransack every home within the US to catch these people. If you don't do something that gives them sufficient evidence to acquire a search warrant, there's nothing they can do about you growing pot in your domicile.
Back to Amazon. Could you, at a high level, describe a process by which they could, for a given account, determine if that account's use of LightSail is legitimate, or is instead intended to avoid incurring data fees from other services? And you must satisfy some additional, absolutely crucial qualifications: this process must not negatively impact abiding users (because they would abandon AWS, resulting in financial harm to AWS), the cost to AWS of executing this process must not be prohibitive (in terms of compute, human resources, etc), and the process must be applied across all accounts within a reasonable time frame (if it takes 1 year for AWS to comb through 1% of accounts, that means you have a mere 1/100 odds of having your service terminated for abusing LightSail for an entire year).
Something being prohibited doesn't imply that it is practicably, fully enforceable.
[1]: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36288408/