Telnetting to any of the servers won't help much; this morning I checked the server time across 6 servers (in about a second using a small program) and then disconnected. a) All the servers reported a different time, with the largest difference being about 4 minutes.b) The closest time reported was 2 minutes behind the time recorded by BSNL.c) The time recorded by BSNL was about 3 minutes behind IST.Hooray!The IPs I tried are a subset of the IPs you can check your usage from. Even if I try all the IPs, I don't think the time on any of these servers is relevant. We need the time on the server that's authenticating or actually keeping the records.In some PPPoE logs I saw 59.92.163.229 and the gateway 59.92.160.1, but I didn't really figure out what these IPs are and unfortunately they do not run any time services (telnetting to port 13 will give you nothing but a "could not open connection" message)So...1) Does anyone out here have a better idea of how this works and maybe knows the address of a server which is actually responsible for keeping the time? 2) Would a social solution work for you guys? Basically a site where users can submit their latest "timecheck". Post the real time and the time reported by BSNL. You should be using NTP yourself and should update your system time before connecting / disconnecting.People can either trust the lag you reported if recent enough or do it themselves and post their results. Of course there will be a +- 10 second error, and there is always human error 🙁 The site would display the most recent posts. We could either create a site separately for this our even start a simple thread here (a Jaiki microblog might be perfect). I don't really like this idea for obvious reasons, and while it is possible to simplify the process of "submitting your time" via a small program (probably an extension to DataFox), it would still require your participation - and you must disconnect for a record 🙁Thoughts?Brian.