Here's my information regarding "Terms of Service" and the services here at squidge.org: **NOTE: Terms Of Service Update, March 15, 2002** Please note -- If you have a UNIX/Web/Mail account through squidge.org, that account and the information about it (the login & password) are yours and yours alone. This means that you are NOT to share your account information with others. If you do, and I find out, I'll be forced to terminate your account for security reasons. Now it's fine if you and another person/some people are using one account for website creation and maintenance, etc. However, you may NOT -- I repeat, NOT -- allowed to give your login & password out to others for the purpose of you and them sharing files, etc. I've gotten hacked too many times to open myself up to this type of attack. I think there's a bit of this going on right now, and I need to ask those of you that have done it to please cease and desist! :) We'll change your password if need be, to prevent others from accessing your account. I hold no rights to someone else's information -- I will just host it. The content is solely owned by the list/email/website owner, and I lay no claim to it. Only exception is when someone approaches me to add their copyrighted terms to the public legal page. One group, the DDTeens, had some problems with people misrepresenting their name, and asked if we could copyright it, so I put together a page saying "The following terms are copyrighted by Squidge Production Facilitators", etc. You can see it at http://www.squidge.org/legal.html I'm really leniant -- Hell, I'm a fan, too. I'm just giving back to the community by hosting chats, mailing lists, websites, and email accounts. I have two rules: No "snuff" flick type stuff and no kiddie porn. Other than that, you can have whatever you want on your website/mailing list, etc. The one time I did object to something was a 600Mb ZIP file that someone made of a CDRom game, stored it on my system, then gave out their login and password to all their friends to log onto my server and take it. First off, I didn't want that kind of traffic, because a few people downloading that all at once will kill all of my bandwidth (thus leaving none for anyone else), and secondly sharing a login and password with others can lead to people breaking into the server. Not good stuff. So anyway, there you have it on the "Terms of Service". As for features, I have two different mailing list managers, the traditional "majordomo", which has all the main bells and whistles that other mailing lists have, and the newer "Lyris" software, which is more robust in most areas because it has a web interface and is more "forgiving" for the user when it comes to commands. For each list, you can have a section for a webpage for that list. Also, I host individual's webpages and email accounts, and have slowed down access to new accounts unless asked about it -- if someone sees the form that exists and moves on, that's OK. If they ask me if I'm going to open up to new users, I usually give them an account. Right now, I have about 125 users, some of which are email only, some are web page only, some have mailing lists, and some are major fan fiction archives. I also have a private IRC (chat) server here that's always in use by one group or another. Since it's just me, I think there's good and bad: There's no corporate BS or anything. People have lots of leeway, etc. I can answer your questions you have pretty easily, and you'll always get the same answer (the right one!) when you ask, no matter who asks. Only time it's bad is when I'm swamped so I can't get to your request within 12 hours (which is a LONG time in cyberspace) or if I go on vacation and you need a new list or something, it'll have to wait until I'm back. So there ya go! Questions? Drop me a note!