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EFF Lists Wi-Fi-Friendly ISPs

trifster writes "It appears that *some* ISPs encourage Wi-Fi hotspots from users connections. Cnet News.com has the article here." The list itself is on the EFF's site. Most of the ISPs with policies against wireless NATing seem to turn a blind eye to it most of the time anyhow, though.

11 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. A reason for big mobile-phone companies to sue ? by TrackerChamp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It is indeed good news that some ISPs apparently accept reality (since they can't detect NAT on their nodes anyhow).

    However - especially here in Europe - many big Telecom companies have paid a huge amount of money (several US-billon $) to the governments to get a UMTS license because they thought it to be the only way of getting mobile Internet access.

    Now, when these ISPs actually do not prevent their customers from using their node as a WLAN access point for everybody, these ISPs could quickly become a target of the major telecom companies' law departments. For them, it is much easier to sue ISPs than single "abusers".

    And I think, regarding the momentary state of the economy and the possible mis-investment in the UMTS market, this is more than likely to happen.

    What do the others think?

  2. I think that Speakeasy's CEO sums it up best by blues5150 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    quoted from the article... "Speakeasy's CEO has gone on the record in support of broadband sharing via wireless, basically saying 'you pay us for the bits you use and are welcome to do whatever you like with them."

    --

    1. Re:I think that Speakeasy's CEO sums it up best by GigsVT · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, it makes sense. I mean if you ran an extension cord out your door and put a sign out "free electricity", I doubt the power company would have a problem with it at all. They would even happily install a new transformer on the pole for you if you wanted a bigger one so you could use more power.

      These ISPs that are tryign to be assholes obviously are operating on broken business plans. Overselling bandiwdth and then harassing your users into not using what you sold them isn't a valid business model.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  3. For the acronym impaired by Scoria · · Score: 4, Informative

    In no particular order:

    Wi-Fi - IEEE 802.11b compliant products

    IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers

    EFF - Electronic Frontier Foundation, an organization dedicated to preserving online rights

    NAT - Network Address Translation, typically used to provide Internet address for a local area network while using only one external IP address

    ISP - Internet Service Provider, an organization who provides access to the Internet

    --
    Do you like German cars?
  4. Re:A reason for big mobile-phone companies to sue by lfourrier · · Score: 3, Interesting

    the main problem in Europe is not the ISP, it is the legislation mandating conservation of connection informations. I will not share my wifi access because I'm liable for what anonymous guy do on the net using my access.

  5. ISP' who don't allow WiFi cheat customers by dh003i · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For ANY broadband connection, your paying for unlimited 24/7 time at a pretty high bandwidth (100-200KB/s). They sell you unlimited access, and that's what they should expect you to do.

    All four of these options on how to use one's unlimited access are essentially the same, and users should have the right to do any of them:

    1. Stay online 24/7. This may be done by avid file-sharers and/or downloaders. Some Linux people might want to download the latest ISO for every different distro.

    2. Though not using the connection 24/7 one's self, allowing other's in one's house-hold to use it when one isn't. If different people work different shifts, this is essentially 24/7 usage.

    3. Allow any of your neighbors to come in your home at any time and use your internet connection. Again, essentially the same as 24/7.

    4. Set up a WiFi network. Same as #3, but avoids security issues such as one's computer being stolen.

    ISP's are selling you unlimited bandwidth, and they should expect you to use it. They advertise 24/7 then whine when people actually do use their connection 24/7. Waaah.

  6. Re:Bad analogy by Raetsel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    • "Electricity is metered. Broadband is not (yet)."
    I must disagree. I will try to do so as respectfully as possible.
    1. When I signed up for 768/128 ADSL, the agreement specifically stated "unmetered transfers." While I was specifically prohibited from reselling the service, I could (and did!) give away access. (I only noticed one other person use my wireless -- perhaps there were more, but I only actually "saw" one.)

    2. Verizon (who was NOT my ISP) certainly didn't give a hoot about how much data crossed the physical line.

      Now, about that "metered" part...

    3. The amount of data that can be pulled through a 768-Kbit DSL line is finite. If your ISP charges you what it will cost them to route that much data, you aren't likely to hear complaints if you fill your pipe. (Though JWZ did, and he was using Covad at the time.) Worst case in my situation -- 31-day month with 100% usage 24/7 -- works out to ~280 Gigabytes in a month. MAX. In a conversation with one of the Blarg techs, I learned it costs ~$110/month to route 1 Mbit/sec through a Tier-1 US backbone. That's not including physical circuit fees.

    4. The electricity argument is valid beyond the metering issue as well -- circuits (and transformers) have limits. If you provide one 15-amp circuit there is no danger of someone running their whole house off it, or setting up an electric-arc smelting operation (well, one of any size, anyway...) A flat-rate charge based on (120v X 15A)/1000 X 744 (hours in a 31-day month) X $0.10 (cost per KW/hour) means $134 will completely cover unmetered use of that 15-amp circuit.
    Unfortunately, I had to move. Where I live now is not DSL capable, otherwise I'd still be using Blarg. The cable modem provider doesn't care about NAT (or servers to a limited extent), but they don't want "free internet" out there "on their dime."

    Rather interesting, really... it seems the DSL providers have a more enlightened view of this issue than the cable providers. It shows the difference in culture and levels of greed. Also, my cable provider charges $15/GB for every GB (or fraction) over 10 GB/month. If I wanted to move as much data over cable as I could have on my DSL, my monthly cable bill would be ~$4100!!

    Perhaps prices need to rise somewhat for "free wireless" to be ignored by all ISPs, but unlimited internet access is most definitly feasible.

    --

    "...America's great minds of today, teaching America's great minds of tomorrow. Poor bastards." -- A Beautiful Min
  7. Blind eyes... by jmegq · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Most of the ISPs with policies against wireless NATing seem to turn a blind eye to it most of the time anyhow, though.

    Timothy, that strikes me as a very irresponsible attitude in matters such as this. Didn't we say that about filesharing a year or two ago? Here at least is a case where we can vote with our patronage to companies that have good policies now, so they'll be around tomorrow when others have stopped turning a blind eye to it.

  8. The nature of sharing... by wowbagger · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Likening sharing of bandwidth to either sharing of cable TV or to sharing of electricity is inaccurate.

    Consider sharing Cable TV. Once the wire hits my house, it is easy for me to share with my neighbor - I simply put a distribution amp in the line, and he now has signal. There is no additional drain on the cable TV's resources and no (technological) way the cable company can restrict this. As a result, my neighbor has no reason to buy cable, and I have just cost the cable company a customer. In the limit, the cable company has one customer who shares with the rest of the town, and the cable company goes broke.

    Now, sharing electricity. The electric company charges by the kW/hr, and aside from a relatively small non-usage related service fee the more joules I use the more I pay. If I run a line over to my neighbor, the electric company WILL make more money since my bill goes up. Thus, from a purely profit driven standpoint they lose nothing by this.

    Now, consider Internet connectivity. Few ISPs really charge you based on usage - I have a 384kbps DSL connection, but my ISP probably doesn't plan on me using 100% of that all the time. As such, if I give extra capacity to my neighbor, my neighbor loses any incentive to purchase a connection of his own, and the ISP loses money. Additionally, unlike cable TV, I am increasing the load on my ISP, so the arguement "But I'm not HURTING anybody" really doesn't wash - I am sucking down more bandwidth and loading their system down. But unlike the electric company, it is harder for the ISP to charge on a resources-used basis.

    Now, some ISPs actually DO plan on you using 100% of your allotted bandwidth - this is usually the case for business-grade SLAs like those on T-1 type connections. In such a case, you are back to the idea of "You bought it, it's yours" - share all you want, we make money no matter what. In such cases, the ISP is not likely to care about sharing.

    In the normal case, however, the ISP is very much going to care, and sharing will be forbidden.

    Then, you have the weird cases where the ISP actively promotes wireless sharing because they sell that service too.

  9. a better analogy - local telephone calls by Brian+Ristuccia · · Score: 3

    Yeah, it makes sense. I mean if you ran an extension cord out your door and put a sign out "free electricity", I doubt the power company would have a problem with it at all. They would even happily install a new transformer on the pole for you if you wanted a bigger one so you could use more power.

    A better analogy might be hanging up a POTS telephone outside with a sign that says "unlimited free local calls," because in most cases electricity is metered and local telephone service is not.

    (Some might argue that the telephone is different because you can not make a call on a line at the same instant someone else is. The same holds true for a packet switched connection, however, where two packets can not be sent at exactly the same instant. In both cases, your personal ability to use the service is reduced somewhat if you share it with others).

  10. Re:What we need... by kylegordon · · Score: 3, Informative

    Check out http://www.nodedb.com for all your mapping needs ;-)