Stupid, stupid to fight. In the war of Oversana and Makhost there will be no winners. After all, Oversan actually decided to destroy the business (the business model of which is already in question) McHost, which means that McHost would not return the money to Oversana.
Once I was in a similar situation, and I managed to resolve everything peacefully (see below).
Here everyone writes that, supposedly, Oversan had to warn McHhost clients in advance about a possible outage. And, they say, then McKhost would have begun to pay, under the threat of customer churn.
')
But where would MakHost suddenly have money? Oversun himself draws attention to their business model:
"... clients were attracted by the offer of free unlimited traffic. At the same time, the details of the Makhost business model were not disclosed, and the origin of such favorable conditions remained unknown to customers."And the business model, meanwhile, is clear to me. McHhost found some compromising information on the owners of Oversana and decided that with the help of this compromising material he would be able to control his costs. And indeed, as I understand it, I managed the costs for a while — I did not normally pay for half a year.
As a result, you, dear customers of McHhost, had cheap rates. What well.
It’s bad that Oversand did not explain to MakHost that he was not afraid of disclosing this compromising material and that MakHost would have to change the business model - raise tariffs, etc.
So, the promised story from his personal life.
I remember that once a girl blackmailed me by saying that they would publish some compromising material on me and thus wanted to lower their expenses. What did I do? I published this dirt on myself on the site ricn.ru (if anyone else remembers this site) and the blackmail stopped, we agreed.
In the end, no matter what you find, your mother will still consider you the sun (c) tim_liri
If Oversand himself would have written everything to himself, he would have had a chance to get money from McHhost. And so it is obviously not. And, as a result, Oversan is not only having to write off debts, but also has to reduce prices on colocation at home.
All the losers. But things could be different ...