Customer service at Anonymizer/Cyberpass/Infonex
Given the fact that the Anonymizer often comes up in Cypherpunk contexts, and that many of you are probably reading this list from cyberpass.net, which is hosted by Infonex (which is the same company as the Anonymizer, all run by Lance Cottrell, I believe) some of you may be interested in what Infonex's attitude about customer service is, and how they conduct themselves as a business. First, take a look at what they say about themselves: At http://www.infonex.com/top/statement.html, they claim, "All of our services are not worth much if you are not making good use of them. That is why service is first priority at Infonex." I signed up with them several years ago (after c2net closed down its shell account service). I had my email address @cyberpass.net printed on business cards. I gave it out to everyone. At one point, they stopped offering new shell account services, and then one day, I found that I couldn't log in to my account. I called their customer service number, and found it to be eternally busy, with full voice-mail boxes. Finally, I got through to someone there who explained that there were no more shell accounts; I should get my files out by ftp. That was annoying, but what was worse was that I went to get my files off and found they were all gone. I didn't need them urgently at the time, and I thought, "maybe they're doing maintenance on the server, and they will be restored later." I went back in with ftp today, and they were still gone. I called up their customer service. They basically said that the server crashed and files were lost. Fine, that's no problem. Why not restore from tape? "All the files on /r2 were not backed up, and they are lost." Years worth of email and other files, all lost. As they say, "That is why service is first priority at Infonex." I don't expect an apology from them; there's really nothing which is a substitute for operating in a professional manner. Every time I have had to deal with their customer service, they have always been less than helpful (that is when I can get through to them). Think twice before you do business with them. On the Internet of today, there are plenty of places that do web hosting. Why not choose one that operates in a professional manner? You may say, "if they lose data, that's great for the Anonymizer service!" That would be a naive assumption. Companies which have a culture of sloppiness or unprofessionalism will end up hurting their customers in a variety of ways. If they don't know to use RAID or backup their servers, they probably also don't know to check the security of their code. Sloppy one wy, sloppy every way. Beware.
On Mon, Jul 23, 2001 at 08:26:39PM -0000, Dr. Evil wrote:
Given the fact that the Anonymizer often comes up in Cypherpunk contexts, and that many of you are probably reading this list from cyberpass.net, which is hosted by Infonex (which is the same company as the Anonymizer, all run by Lance Cottrell, I believe) some of you may be interested in what Infonex's attitude about customer service is, and how they conduct themselves as a business.
I have been having an interesting problem with my cypherpunks feed from sirius.infonex.net - twice in the last 3 weeks or so it has suddenly and without warning started sending me empty email messages (zero length body) with essentially null headers (none of the normal email envelope headers and no indication of where the message came from other than owner_cypherpunks@cyberpass.net). And all flow of actual cypherpunks list messages stopped when these anomalous messages started. I presume that each null message I got was really meant to be a cypherpunks list mailing that somehow got trashed - superficially this looks like an out of space condition in one of the spool queues. This condition persisted in one case for 4 or 5 days and in the most recent case for about 3. And then things suddently started working again. So indeed their system administration may leave a bit to be desired - perhaps they are barely afloat financially and can't pay someone to watch things like space on their server queue file systems and backups. -- Dave Emery N1PRE, die@die.com DIE Consulting, Weston, Mass. PGP fingerprint = 2047/4D7B08D1 DE 6E E1 CC 1F 1D 96 E2 5D 27 BD B0 24 88 C3 18
participants (2)
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Dave Emery
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Dr. Evil