Amazon operates on a scale where they can handle this type of thing I don't mean automaticlaly, but they have the access points and gear in place to do it, and the levearage with the right ISPs.
Buying a 10 gig link woulnd't be a distributed denial of service attack, and itwould be far too easy for the providers to not only find out who it was and filter it out, but to find out who to sue for all the wasted time and bandwidth and other criminal charges.
>Amazon operates on a scale where they can handle this type of thing
My point is that by "handle this sort of thing" in the context of ec2, means "charge you for the traffic and pass it through" which some times is just fine; but quite often it still means a denial of service, if it doesn't bring down your servers, it will eventually bring down your bank account. I mean, I don't know about you, but at north of $350 an hour, my bank account isn't going to last long.
First, you are assuming both parties are in the same country, and second, you think the provider would notice instantly, or charge ~$6 per minute until filtered.
Buying a 10 gig link woulnd't be a distributed denial of service attack, and itwould be far too easy for the providers to not only find out who it was and filter it out, but to find out who to sue for all the wasted time and bandwidth and other criminal charges.