Indco.net Network Management Practices
Indco.net uses reasonable network-management practices to help
accomplish the following goals:
- Allow customers to access and use any legal Web content they
prefer, thus complying with the FCC’s Open Internet Order
- Mitigate network congestion, which can interfere with
customers’ preferred online activities
- Promote customer compliance with our Acceptable Use Policy
- Help prevent customer harm or inconvenience from malicious or
illegal traffic.
In pursuing these goals, we are mindful of the dynamic nature of
customer Internet habits and related public-policy discussions.
Accordingly, while we are confident our network-management practices
are reasonable, equitable, minimally intrusive, and consistent with
FCC regulations, those practices are not static; they are actively
reviewed and refined in order to provide our customers with the best
possible Internet experience.
As changes are made to our network-management practices, we will
update the following information describing those practices.
- We regularly invest in additional fiber nodes and network
equipment to make available more bandwidth per home and greater
downstream and upstream system capacity.
- Where it is technologically feasible and when bandwidth is
available, we provide customers with temporary “bursts” of
additional speed, allowing their equipment to more quickly and
efficiently complete their work.
- On residential accounts, we block ports 25, 68, and certain
others, to enhance network security and performance. To help
prevent parties with malicious intent from compromising or
disrupting our network, we do not publish all blocked ports.
- Based on the experience of our engineering team and their
monitoring of Arbor alerts, virus alerts, atypical packet
swarms, we block IP addresses and continent codes known or
deemed to be abusive, we also strive to intercept spam, viruses,
denial-of-service attacks, and other malicious or illegal
Internet traffic.
- To help prevent disruption to Internet service, we do not
support non-DOCSIS devices (and where DOCSIS 2.0 is availible,
DOCSIS 1.x modems) nor do we allow certain other devices (such
as routers and modems capable of generating broadcast storms) to
connect to our network. In addition, we do not allow devices
with cloned MAC addresses to connect to our network because the
use of such devices is prohibited by law.
- Residential customers are prohibited from using or running
dedicated, stand-alone equipment, servers, or programs for
commercial or other non-personal reasons, including but not
limited to email, Web hosting, file sharing, and proxy services
or servers (e.g. FTP, file, or game servers). For further
information regarding prohibited uses, see our Acceptable Use Policy.
- To help mitigate potential network congestion, we are in the
process of applying bandwidth usage allowances to residential
Internet accounts, with incremental bandwidth automatically
provided for a nominal,incremental fee. These limits can be
found in section 8 of the Acceptable Use Policy
- We prioritize Indco.net voice packets in order to provide
quality service to our phone customers.
For questions about our network-management practices, services, or
policies that are not addressed by the information provided here,
please email us at: techsupport@indco.net
Finally, per current regulatory requirements, Indco's average
network performance statistics are published here.
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