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Dan Rutter Suggests Tossing Some Wi-Fi At the Neighbors

A few days ago, Dan Rutter (the Dan in "Dan's Data") published an interesting idea for extending the sort of philanthropic technical pranksterism that spawned throwies by applying the same approach to Wi-Fi. That means, looking what he hopes is not too far down the road, creating Wi-Fi repeaters that are cheap enough to deploy on the sly and frugal enough with power to run on solar power or cheaply replaceable batteries. But as he says, "If you've got a lot of spare money, a ladder and no respect for private property, though, you could already be stealthily deploying Open-Mesh or other such gadgets all over your neighbourhood." In some cities at least, you'd be hard pressed to ever avoid at least one available wireless access point, but that's not the experience for most people, most places -- which bears correction.

3 of 225 comments (clear)

  1. Interesting by spikedvodka · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's an interesting idea... but here's the thing I can't see the ISPs letting something like this happening.

    Also, what's to prevent somebody from stealing one of the boxes, and causing an outage... or modifying the firmware on one of these boxes to sniff for passwords?

    --
    I will not give in to the terrorists. I will not become fearful.
    1. Re:Interesting by NeverVotedBush · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Dude, there is nothing magic about an ISP. You could pay for a T1 or so and be your own ISP. You can set up your own hardware. Just be prepared to pay for it - the exact same way your ISP does.

      Being an ISP is not anything that special. You just have to be willing to pay the costs, deal with the business aspects, deal with the legal aspects, and if you have employees, deal with income tax, unemployment tax, etc.

      It's not like being an ISP is something willed or auctioned like season tickets or anything.

      You can be an ISP, or even eliminate needing an ISP. All it takes is money.

      You see, that is what ISPs provide - they handle all the business side of things and charge individual subscribers some reasonable amount for access through cable, DSL, digital cell access, etc.

  2. Re:I like it by westlake · · Score: 4, Interesting
    So? Years back, "service" was intended for one computer. We got ourselves routers because it was quite silly that providers were charging on a per computer basis. It just didn't make sense

    So they go back to charging you by the megabyte. Full commercial rates for the five to fifteen households you are now servicing.