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My suggestion - give the users a warning, let them know the situation and what is basically happening - give them a few days to stop their actions, then drop the company the anonymous notice of the issue. The violaters have their warning, it's up to them to decide which course of action to take from that point.
The company will still however,have logs..and they potentially do have the right to sue..though it's very debatable if they'll do it..it's not something that's usually done in this country.
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Hello therenegade It is not your business (corporation) and you, your family and friends are not employees or stockholders? You are not even being inconvenienced by these people using the bandwidth?
If all that is true, you have no moral obligations whatsoever
None whatsoever then nihil;).The CFO idea though,was ingenious lol..never occured to me..but wouldn't it be possible to counter it by saying that since they didn't sign up for such a service in the first place as it isn't mentioned anywhere in the Terms and Agreement form they sign?(I looked it up,no mention obviously).So in effect the company would be charging them for a service which they aren't charging for?The question would then become "Is it moral(and legal) to use a service that you're not paying for but under circumstances the provider is unaware of?":D