Slashdot Mirror


The Wifi Slugfest Over Portland's PGE Park

tomwhore writes "Portland's community wireless networking group, Personal Telco Project (PTP), recently knocked one into the ball park with a new WiFi node. The new node covers the area around and inside of Portland's PGE Ballpark. While free internet access would be welcome by most, PGE Park managers are not happy. They recently cut a deal giving Comcast exclusive rights to do up their networking. 'This is our stadium, and we run the communications for it,' said Chris Metz, a PGE Park spokesman. To find out more about the impact of the PTPs latest home run check out this article in the Oregonian and over at the PTP's website." Let's hope the park also puts a Faraday cage around the whole park to ensure radio silence.

34 of 310 comments (clear)

  1. SprintPCS by morcheeba · · Score: 3, Funny

    Let's hope I can't use sprint PCS's phone in the park!

  2. Overrated... by TopShelf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. Volunteers enable wireless access at ballpark
    2. They put out a news released titled, "PGE Park gets free Wi-Fi thanks to Personal Telco and Moonlight Staffing"
    3. PGE Park management (understandably) is concerned that the news release implies their participation in this effort, and this might offend a major park sponsor, Comcast.
    4. Comcast replies that they don't care. Life goes on.

    They call this a "slugfest?" Yeesh...

    --
    Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
  3. Relax, it's Comcast. by Trespass · · Score: 4, Funny

    Their service will be down most of the time, anyhow.

    1. Re:Relax, it's Comcast. by Fishstick · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Huh?


      Comcast, however, is not in this ballgame.
      Comcast prohibits its customers from distributing the company's Internet services to the public, said Sarah Eder, a Comcast spokeswoman.
      But Moonlight Staffing broadcasts a high-speed service from Beaverton-based EasyStreet Online Services, not Comcast.

      --

      There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
      Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

  4. Oooh! I've been waiting for this. by Trigun · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's see what the courts say on this one. I would love the courts to say that it was illegal for an outside provider to broadcast network signals onto your property.

    Can anyone else see the ramifications of this?

  5. Why there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I know I always take my laptop with me to the ballpark!

  6. Darwin award candidates by DogIsMyCoprocessor · · Score: 5, Funny
    At any given time, as many as about 60 people with laptops equipped for WiFi can surf the Web.

    If 60 people at a ballgame are surfing on laptops, one of them will almost certainly take a foul ball right in the face. Here's a tip - pay attention to the game.

    --

    "And this is my boy, Sherman. Speak, Sherman." "Hello." "Good boy."

  7. A portland resident speaks... by Cuchullain · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is great!

    I imagine that this is not actually related to comcast, as the article implies, but rather to the fact that portland is currently trying to get a major league team into the stadium.

    The reason I think this might be a problem, is that major league teams have been shying away from portland because of its reputation as a place with high taxes and ultra-left wing views. Major league baseball is just another huge corporate entity, and these kinds of tweaks are exactly what they are afraid of. The portland city government, and pge park don't want the perception that they are out of control, as it will negatively impact MLB's view of Portland.

    So I say- GO For it free wireless guys! I don't want to see my taxes raised again for a useless baseball team. Especially when unemployment is almost 10% and our taxes are increasing already!

    Cuchullain

    --
    "If sharing a thing in no way diminishes it, it is not rightly owned if it is not shared." -St. Augustine
  8. Umm, not according to the FCC by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 4, Insightful
    'This is our stadium, and we run the communications for it,'

    Tell it to the FCC. They control the airwaves in your little stadium, not you.

    --
    "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
    1. Re:Umm, not according to the FCC by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unlicensed is not the same as unregulated and uncontrolled. The FCC does control the frequency and does specify the conditions under which it is used. The bottom line is that the park has no jurisdiction or power to override the FCC. And the FCC says that anyone can use the frequency if they follow the rules.

      --
      "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
  9. The submitter did not read the article. by Minstrel78 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The poster writes, "They recently cut a deal giving Comcast exclusive rights to do up their networking," when the article clearly states multiple times that Comcast isn't an issue. Comcast is merely a sponsor of the park. The ballpark manager is being too sensitive to the wording of the PTP's press release which could be read to suggest that PGE park management worked with the PTP to set up the wireless access when in fact it is being provided from a location across the street. The park manager is inventing some sort of conflict where none exists. Be sure to read the article before engaging in knee-jerk bashing of Comcast.

  10. It might be down...but consider the implications.. by Mistlefoot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "'This is our stadium, and we run the communications for it,' said Chris Metz, a PGE Park... "

    What about cell phone communications?

    Or palm pilots and the like?

    What about communicating to the opposing team that you prefer them (ie, those cheering for the opposition must sit in section 9)?

    Now the last example is quite silly, but what is the difference between wireless internet access and cellphone access? Do they have the legal rights to control such?

  11. This is About Politics and PR, not Tech by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Boy, what a mis-leading article summary!! The Getz guy was even taken out of context! I advise everyone to RTFA before commenting on this one...

    Sure sounded good, though, no?

    "Fuzzy-Seattle-Populist-WiFi-Free-Node in slugfest! versus Big-Greedy-Sports-Cable-Corporate-Luddites."

    Wow! I was getting all set for a Thousand-Post-Pile-On before I read the article.

    Damn shame, this reality. Always getting in the way of a good story...

  12. In something we trust. by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 4, Interesting
    And such is the state of our society that a free service, dropped into one's lap, is cause for consternation.

    We have become such slaves to the dollar that the very specter of affront to a sponsor or corporate backer is reason enough to go after a free, community-driven service.

    This isn't about Comcast; this isn't about PGE Park's management. Rather, they're just placeholders for the larger problem. This is about the slow, gentle, comfortable erosion of American values--not the God, family, and apple pie values of tradition, but independence, community, and the common good values of the human spirit.

    This is not liberty. This is not happiness. This is voluntary bondage to the almighty dollar. I'm not one to get all uppity about this kind of thing--I'm generally pretty laissez-faire--but it's sad to see this kind of thing. Why, oh why, does my country care more about a dollar than anything else?

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  13. Don't worry by Trigun · · Score: 4, Funny

    The headgear will protect him.

  14. Re:Oooh! I've been waiting for this. by theflea · · Score: 4, Funny

    obligatory simpsons quote: "I'm rebroadcasting major league baseball with implied oral consent....not express written consent!"

  15. Oh for heavens sake .... by taniwha · · Score: 3, Interesting

    it's an article about a baseball park - "slugfest" is a totally appropriate term - there about 100 years of newspaper subeditors writing headlines with these sorts of punish content - why should electronic media be any different?

  16. Re:That's not gay, that's terrorism by falcon5768 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Interesting granted the hospital near my house has JUST SUCH A DEVICE, to block cellphone transmitions from entering the hospital. Dont ask me how, cause they refuse to tell me or let me see this device, but sure enough anytime I drive by on my way to the parkway the cellphone cuts out right at the hospital when I had a full signal 2 feet in front of and beyond the area.

    and yes this is some sort of device, there are signs saying that cellphone signals are blocked all over the hospital.

    --

    "Slashdot, where telling the truth is overrated but lying is insightful."

  17. follow the money by Trelane,+the+Squire · · Score: 3, Insightful
    when you spend money to make a service available, only to be undercut by technology, you are going to be upset (as will be the person providing the service)... it's human nature.

    This is another example of a new service that is not yet regulated, and the companies that are regulated are getting hot around the collar over it.

    The workers laid off by the cotton loom didn't like it either, but see where they are today.

  18. PGE Management Assholes by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm sorry but the morons that run PGE Park are idiots.

    And besides, the city of Portland owns the Park and the group that runs the stadium for the city owes them back rent.

    In my mind, since they don't own the stadium, they shouldn't be bitching. It's not like this is going to damage thier hold on the lease. They are doing that without any Wi-Fi signals coming across the fence without Comcast's permission.

  19. Re:Oh great! by jpsst34 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Exactly. Reading Slashdot is work. Er, at least I charge my employer as if it's work! Why would I want to work when I go to the ballgame? Oh, right! Because baseball is even more boring than the crap I'm supposed to do at work.

    --
    How are you going to keep them down on the farm once they've seen Karl Hungus?
  20. Cheating? by 4/3PI*R^3 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    There's the story of George Stallings of the NY Yankees. Stallings, rented an apartment across from Yankee Stadium that had a clear view of the catcher. A person sitting in this apartment could see the signals the catcher was giving, call the dugout of the Yankee's and tell the manager what the signal was. The manager could then signal the batter as to what pitch to expect. He then converted this whole process behind a whiskey advertisement that was not as susceptible to cloudy days. These guys were really imaginative and resourcefull with the technology (or lack there of) of the day.

    Now fast forward to 2003 with WiFi in ball parks. Imagine not one spotter but 10, or 20, or 30 spotters scattered around the stands all with a laptop and all simultaneously keying in the catcher's signs.

    As opposed to what happened to Stallings, I don't think this is cheating. I think anybody who can hit a 90+MPH fast ball deserves to use any means necessary to accomplish this. At least with a WiFi network the visiting team could also place some spotters in the stand.

  21. Re:It might be down...but consider the implication by Trelane,+the+Squire · · Score: 5, Insightful
    They own the site, but do they own the airwaves? the block of space above their portion of the planet? the slice of universe extending out from the earth? (that last one was a stretch, nonetheless...)

    If someone opens a node and it extends over the park, the only thing they can do is do an intensive search of everyone coming into the park to make sure they aren't carrying anything that could access the node. I don't think that would go over very well.

  22. PGE Park has bigger problems... by Beek+Dog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    First off, PGE is owned by Enron. Portland wants to buy it, but Enron wants to dissect it and sell the assets to pay off debts, and have rate-payers help with the debt. OK, not exactly, but something like that. Second, nobody wants to own PGE Park. It's not profitable. Our weeklies usually have a least one article a month about some poor, old, rich bastard who can't pay the City of Portland for rent. Third, PGE Park lost power not too long ago. This is the park with Portland General Electric in the name! They can't even keep their own power on! Blocking Wi-Fi? It's probably science fiction to them. I agree with a previous poster, this is no slugfest. This is a bloated 600-pound gorilla complaining about someone else's scent covering their foul odor... BTW, Portland itself kicks major yahoo.

  23. Re:its all a waste of time by soliaus · · Score: 5, Insightful
    all this wireless internet business is overrated, so few people take advantage of it, look at the numbers from starbucks or McDs

    Overrated? Few people? Your either stupid, or just have not really looked at the *scene* that hard. First of all, there are many projects what are setting up community waps and wlans. Some of a few mentionable ones are BAWUG and FreeNet.

    Nobody cares about starbucks wireless internet access when they can associate with the AP down the street using a pringles can! Even users who dont know how to use external antennas can choose which access point they want to associate with. Which would you pick, the free one down the street, or the pay one at Starbucks/McD's?

    As for so few people taking advantage of it, how many people do you think have implemented wireless to cover an apartment complex? Their house? Neighborhood? ALOT. I dont know the numbers, but Have read many, many, many success stories and am constantly doing ap setups for local businesses, as well as consumers.

    Another venue you have probably not thought about is the WISP field. There is actually a verry successfull WISP in my city called KeyOn. For dialup proces they offer high speed internet via wireless. Heres the best part: they are not loosing money! People are coming to their service like bees to honey. Whats that say about "few people"?
    ------------------
    C:\DOS //WTF?!?!?
    /root //Yay!

    --
    Speaking at Defcon 12 - Credit Card Networks Revisted: Pen
  24. Not So Subtle Issues Here by ewhac · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This could actually become a very messy issue.

    Assuming very low contention, you can videocast over an 802.11b link. Some guy brings in his shiny new Sony VAIO PCG-TR1A with built-in camera and 802.11b, and starts broadcasting the game from his seat in the stadium. (Yeah, it'll suck, but that won't matter, as we shall shortly see.)

    This will piss off a number of people:

    • Major League Baseball (TM)(R)(C)(BFD), who claim copyright to the "performance" embodied by the baseball game, and assert exclusive rights to control all access to those "performances",
    • The local and national television network, who have cut an "exclusive" broadcasting contract with MLB and the stadium,
    • The stadium owner whose television blackout radius of 10 miles (negotiated "exclusively" with the television network) is being violated by the smartass in Section 12, seat 13-E, thereby undercutting attendance revenues.

    They've built for themselves a cozy little relationship that doesn't involve competition or, indeed, people thinking for themselves at all (sit down, shut up, buy the $6.50 hot dogs, oh, and enjoy the game). Expect shrill whining from Entrenched Interests the moment they even suspect anything like this might happen.

    Schwab

  25. Read the article.. by brandon · · Score: 5, Informative

    PGE Park doesn't mind having it, and states how they don't mind it as they have no possition on wifi as Comcast isn't in the market. What PGE Park didn't like how PTP stated, "PGE Park gets Wireless Access thanks to PTP". To anyone who isn't in the free wifi 'know', this sounds like a business deal, and I completly side with PTP on this. The wording/catchphrase/marketing chosen for the announcement is not fair, and I can see why PGE Park has said what they did.

    PTP kinda put words in PGE Parks mouth, and makes it sound like PGE Park was fully involved. Future problems could be people complaining about wifi access to PGE Park, or any other 'internet' issues. Worst case could be someone can't make a stock sell, loses money, sues PGE Park because of the announcement he knew of "PGE Park gets wifi acces thanks to PTP", judge see's it, yells at PTP, case dropped, and PGE Park gets some bad press. It's not fair to PGE Park. .. If anything the title of this slashdot article should be, "Wifi group PTP puts PGE Park in a bad situation with recent announcement."

    I personally provide free wifi for my neighborhood and joining the local wifi club soon. Since airspace is shared and not easily seperated there's some things you have to be careful of to make sure bad relations arn't formed in this process, and this is one case to be aware of for the future.. I hope PTP is more careful in the future.

    my $.02

  26. PTP vs Starbuck ...2002 by tomwhore · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is not the first time the PTP has run into a snag trying to offer free net access. Back a while ago there was a slight problem with the then new Starbucks hotposts at the "heart" of the city.

    http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.s sf ?/xml/story.ssf/html_stand
    ard.xsl?/base/front_pa ge/102975810817580.xml

    08/19/02
    JEFFREY KOSSEFF and ERIC HAND

    The world's biggest barista and a grass-roots group are squaring off in a wireless game of chicken at Pioneer Courthouse Square.

    On one end stands Starbucks, which this week likely will begin marketing a paid service that lets its customers in Portland's living room connect their laptops wirelessly to the Internet. On the other is Personal Telco, a local group of computer hobbyists, which has provided the same service for free in the square since February.

    Sure, there's room on the wireless spectrum for peaceful coexistence. But Starbucks, using wireless carrier T-Mobile, is transmitting its signal on the same channel Personal Telco has used for the past six months. Neither has budged.

    The result? Both Starbucks customers and Personal Telco members may face slower speeds on the suddenly crowded channel.

    The battle illustrates a growing problem with the increasingly popular technology known as wireless fidelity, or "Wi-Fi." Unlike cell phones, it operates on an unlicensed spectrum, so experts expect such disputes will become more common as demand grows.

    Like cordless phones and walkie-talkies, nobody can own Wi-Fi's spectrum, and federal regulators have little authority over it, said Dale Hatfield, former chief of the Federal Communications Commission's Office of Engineering and Technology.

    "There's no prior claims; there's no squatter's rights; there's nothing like that," said Hatfield, now a telecommunications professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder. "You both have to try to live with each other. I can't imagine why one wouldn't voluntarily move to one of the other channels that has less interference."

    Adam Shand can imagine. The founder of Personal Telco says his group was there first and that in similar disputes nationwide, incumbents have successfully retained their wireless channels.

    "If we take the stance that we're the little guy and start hopping around, what happens when there are no channels left?" Shand said.

    Representatives of Starbucks and T-Mobile owner VoiceStream said they were unaware of any other wireless Internet presence in the square and had no comment on Personal Telco's objection.

    Since late 2000, Personal Telco has persuaded individuals and businesses to donate high-speed Internet connections to its cause -- creating a "cloud" of free wireless access over the Portland area. Using specially designed "wireless ethernet" cards, Web surfers within a block or two of the donors' homes or businesses can tap into the signal.

    The group has about 70 Internet access points throughout the Portland area. One was donated by WebCriteria, a Web consultancy whose eighth-floor offices overlook Pioneer Courthouse Square.

    As many as six people have surfed the Web at the same time in the square using the WebCriteria link, often receiving connections faster than wired broadband connections, said Nigel Ballard, a
    Personal Telco member and owner of wireless consultancy joejava.com.

    To connect through Personal Telco, users can type a donor's identification number, available on the group's Web site, www.personaltelco.net. Their computers also can search for the Internet connection. And until recently, they've latched onto Personal Telco's signal in Pioneer Courthouse Square.

    Now, they can inadvertently connect to the Starbucks paid service.

    Although Starbucks and T-Mobile will likely begin marketing the service this week in the square, Shand said the paid service has been operating for a few weeks. Personal Telco users have reported problems.

    "The performance of o

    --
    Poor little clams! Snap! Snap! Snap! Poor little clams! Snap! Snap! Snap! Poor little clams! Snap! Snap! Snap!
  27. WiFi means more than just laptops by dspyder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You people saying "why would you want to bring your laptop to a game" aren't getting the point.

    What about WiFi PDAs? Great for sending that quick email or text message. What about WiFi cellphones? In order to replace the evil telecommunications giants, we need an IP connection _everywhere_. That's more important than being able to surf porn on your laptop.

    Think future technologies, people!

    --D

  28. Re:Need to look at FCC rules by valkraider · · Score: 4, Informative

    PGE park would be easy to cover the entire park with *regular* WAPs - let alone WAPs with good antennas. How much do you know about PGE Park? It is a small park with a couple open sides, and lots of businesses and apartments around - and on a hill. So it would be very easy to put a good directional antenna in a building up the hill next to the park and cover most of the stadium. Check out PortlandMaps Aerial Photo for a better context.

  29. This really isn't a problem... by Javaman97 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Cause nobody goes to PGE park anyway....

  30. Re:It might be down...but consider the implication by gclef · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In some ways, you can't even limit a signal's access to your property. The Farraday cage idea is actually illegal.

    The FCC takes a very dim view of people cutting out certain frequencies from the public spectrum, and for good reason. If you cut a broadcast off in your property, you've just blackholed everyone that sits downstream (down-cast?) from you. That makes it interference with the public airwaves, and therefore a crime.

    Imagine this scenario: two radio stations compete for listeners...one of them buys a house very near the competitors broadcast towers and then black-holes their broadcast to huge sections of the city. Under your argument this would be legal, as the person owning the house doesn't want this signal in their property.

  31. No, the FCC regulates radio communications by bigpat · · Score: 3, Informative

    "This is our stadium, and we run the communications for it"

    No, the FCC regulates radio communications. They have no right under existing law to control the radio transmissions on their property.

  32. But are the managers really against it? by Chambers81 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It seems to me from the article that they aren't up in arms against wireless interenet access. More that they're covering their asses against a major sponsor. The press release makes it sound like the park had something to do with arranging the WAP that is run through a competitor to Comcast. So before we start calling names towards their management, remember that the ballpark is just trying to keep out of any lawsuits.