They says they offer 100 Mbit/s "unlimited access".
I wish them good luck, but honestly, I don't think you can offer 100 Mbit/s continuous for that cheap. The upstream providers aren't that cheap so how can they do it? At this price, they cannot last very long. I predict that they will soon insert fine print in their ads redefining the term "illimit?". Still, for individuals, it's interesting.
Also, from a legal standpoint, France is a very risky place for us to host our forum. We routinely have spammers posting more or less offending posts, and I am not always available to delete them quickly. Furthermore, we have bona fide users who frequently criticize companies and brands (see the thread "Companies that spam or sell your address!",
http://www.spamgourmet.com/bbs/viewtopic.php?t=81).
All of this must already be scrutinized carefully in spite of the US First Amendment. But in France, thanks to the Fontaine law, we (as site owners) would become legally responsible for the posts of our users! If someone posts "XXX sucks", then company XXX can shut down the site simply by threatening our ISP with a lawsuit, and then sue us after the site has been shut down. There are precedents already.
The French judges also seem to side with big companies against individuals and small guys, most of the time. See the sad story of Serge Humpich, an engineer who was sent to jail by the French banking card association for proving their system was insecure (
http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1495040) or the tale of Milka Boudimir, a taylor that lost ownership of her site against Kraft foods (
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/55737). There are many, many more examples where French justice allowed small guys to be trampled by big bullies in technical and Internet affairs.
Overall, from a legal standpoint, I think that an IP lawyer such as Josh would think twice before entrusting his web site to the wisdom of that legal system.
Disclaimer: I *love* France. I just think that the First Amendment is better than French law.