On 9 Oct 2016 11:36, "pa011" <pa011@web.de> wrote:
>
> - what forces drive ISP's to behave like they do with abuses?
>         - maybe Exit volunteers and here especially the big ones could ask some questions to their ISP to get more light on this

I set up my own ISP (AS28715) so I could run Tor exits etc without any trouble.

>
>         I do refer to my old questions -still unanswered:
>
>                 -is it just the more work for rather poor money handling(forwarding)
>                         those abuses ?

Yes. Every abuse ticket is a person answering that abuse ticket instead of helping a customer who is potentially paying for support.

It's also that some of the abuse emails can be quite threatening (e.g. blacklisting the entire /24 or reporting the "crime" to local Police etc) some of the smaller ISPs can get intimidated by those threats.

>                 - to whom else do ISP's have to report what they are doing with received
>                   abuses?

In the UK; No one.

>                 - must ISP's answer to the origin of the abuse?

No. But is polite to do so.

>                 - who is getting a copy of all that conversation(if at all)?

Depends on the ISPs policies / any applicable laws. (In the UK and at least as far as my ISP is concerned; no-one)

>                 - can an ISP loose its license (with too many or badly handled abuses)?

AFAIK; No. In the UK I guess one could appeal to Court if an ISP wasn't preventing its network from being used to your detriment but I'm not sure how far you'd get.

>                 - are there any regulatory burdens for them - if so which ones?

Yes. Lots depending on the country.

>                 - are ISP's treated different in different parts of the world?

Very much so.