You could tunnel to a data center. Or NAT out their service.
Tunneling via EoIP would allow you to stay within their ToS. > On Dec 17, 2015, at 16:01, b...@theworld.com wrote: > > > I'm looking at some sort of 50-100mbps failover link in case my > primary is down. > > My options seem limited particularly since I'm cheap. > > I see Comcast has unlimited data business links in this range but I'm > not sure I'd want to deal with the management issue of BGP or swapping > ip blocks etc with them in an emergency. I just tried calling their > business sales line and after the initial "Thank you for calling > Comcast Business Services etc" it dropped me...three times. Yeah, that > builds confidence. > > So I'm thinking something more like using their service as a raw > bandwidth pipe and tunneling to an actual route provider? > > Crazy? Anyone done anything like this? Are there tools for that? > Other, similar suggestions? > > Feel free contact me off-list. > > -- > -Barry Shein > > Software Tool & Die | b...@theworld.com | http://www.TheWorld.com > Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: 617-739-0202 | Login: 617-739-WRLD > The World | Public Access Internet | Since 1989 *oo*