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Pentagon and Wi-Fi Deal Reached

byteCoder writes "CNet reports that the US Military and the Wi-Fi manufacturers have struck an agreement on reducing the interference on military radars by Wi-Fi equipment. Basically, future wireless equipment will detect the presence of military radar and not transmit over the top of it. Additionally, as part of the compromise, defense officials will endorse the doubling of the number of allowed wireless frequencies--thus opening more spectrum to wireless users (as long as the FCC and Congress agree)."

2 of 120 comments (clear)

  1. Who wins? by PseudonymousCoward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Will WiFi equipment be able to tell the difference between military radar, police department radar, and other forms of non-WiFi radiation in the relevant frequency ranges? Will WiFi stop working if I wardrive near a police car? Will it stop working if a police car drives by my house?

    Does this "agreement" allow anyone who wants to suppress the use of WiFi to turn on a device that simulates 'military radar"?

    Just wondering.
    .

    --
    If it isn't true, don't say it. If it isn't helpful, don't say it. If it's true and helpful, wait for the right time.
  2. Re:Just what I've always wanted by Cy+Guy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    With detectors comes jammers

    Similarly, just by mimicking the signal of the military radar you could launch a Denial of Service attack against anyone trying to use Wi-Fi.

    It would seem this compromise results in a serious trade-off of National security versus the security of the users' own systems. It could end up being a nasty tool for industrial sabotage if you could shut down networking at competitor's facility from a van parked outside. As a result, it could limit the acceptance of Wi-Fi as a replaced for wired LANs - and keep it as a mobile only technology.

    (I know a lot of supposition went into that, but heck, I'm only posting to SlashDot).