Regarding securiy issues, I'd suggest working with
UUNet/Worldcom (or whatever AS701 is called lately).
I've seen some of their folks work closely with
aggrieved victims of DDOS attacks.
-David Barak
"Quis custodes ipsos custodiet?" - Juvenal
Rick Cheung wrote:
Does anyone have an opinion on a decent ISP
out there that's proven to work with the
customer during a DDOS storm?
Regarding securiy issues, I'd suggest working with
UUNet/Worldcom (or whatever AS701 is called lately).
I've seen some of their folks work closely with
aggrieved victims of DDOS attacks.
I was going to say the same thing, but I'm probably not as
believeable. 
And it's UUNET. It'll remain UUNET until they turn off the last
router.
ericb
Regarding securiy issues, I'd suggest working with
UUNet/Worldcom (or whatever AS701 is called lately).
I've seen some of their folks work closely with
aggrieved victims of DDOS attacks.
Historically, BBN/Genuity/GTE/Verizon/Genuity... and
Alternet/UUNET/MFS/Worldcom have been consistently
the most responsive to security issues. Of course, they
each have their good days, and their bad days. MCI was
good, AT&T is improving.
The most common problem is different carriers have different
views on what is a "security" issue. And they each have
their quirks on how you reach their security people. Often
Abuse, Security and Legal are different groups of people, and
its up to the customer to figure out how to navigate the
corporate org chart.