In theory, you're right. However, putting a cap of 20 people, then
charging for anything over 20 is profiting directly from Circle--the
people are paying money to play CircleMUD. On Netcom, AOL, Genie, etc
the people are paying for access to a service that lets them do many
things, one of those being establish remote connections to other machines.
-ads|lc
-My horse for a kingdom!
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : 12/07/00 PST