BYO Linux Router To Australia's Fibre Network
An anonymous reader writes "Run a Linux router to connect your ADSL service but worried about what will happen when the Australian Government rolls out fibre broadband to your house or business? Worry no more. It turns out that customers on Australia's new National Broadband Network will be able to run their own homebrew Linux router to connect to the network and route traffic any way they please."
So, when someone brings a new network connection to your house, via a standard ethernet cable, you'll be allowed to connect a device of your choosing to the end? Socking. This makes the frontpage of slashdot now?
Awesome bunnies!
But how about on Australian Filtered fiber?
Virgin in the UK used to refuse support until you connected a Mac or Windows box directly. Routers were 'not supported'.
Doesn't every ISP allow you to do this? Your ISP provides with a modem of the correct type (DSL or cable) and you provide your own router. If they give you a modem that is also a router, you can turn that off or ask them for a plain old modem. With many ISPs, at least in the US, you can even provide your own modem.
I've been running my own Linux router for the past 12 years across multiple ISPs, from T1 providers back in college to DSL providers to Comcast, and have never had a problem doing so. The tech support may be clueless if you call ("Did you reboot your router?" "Let me do that ...
All Jews possess the following features: ... shitty taste in dental hygiene.
(Shouldn't rise to the bait, but...)
Right, this *totally* explains my Jewish dentist redoing all my upper teeth last year so that I could actually start smiling instead of cringing -- at a 40% discount off his listed fees -- because I'd obviously needed the work done quite badly for years.
Oh, did I mention that he's an *Iraqi* Jew?
Thanks for sorting that out for me, AC!
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
linux users will also still be able to use the national electricity network to power their devices.
The summary says that you can 'route your data in way you want', does this mean that you can avoid the internet filter? Or have they implemented the filter properly (i.e. centrally)? Which would make this a non-story.
For the record, it wouldn't surprise me if they had implemented the internet filter at consumer-router/modem level. They're bright enough to do it that way.
You should'a turned right at Digg, not left. Go start back at Google, 4chan is that'a'way.
Unfortunately not but I thought this one was funny.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
..once the filter kicks in the Internet will stop at your ISP... a bit like owning a ferrari in Antarctica
Not. Yet.
Though I do check /s/ every night after the wife has gone to bed purely to make sure it is still there.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
Nuf said.
How is changing your router going to get around filters? It's ISP based, the outgoing routes are going to be filtered anyway.
Why would I be worried? I thought that it was obvious that you can use existing networking equipment otherwise the NBN would be pointless if you can't use it. That's even if NBN makes it to mainland Australia.
Just as Australia enters the late 20th C with optical, Stephen Conroy takes us back to the digital dark ages again.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Amazing. You can use an Ethernet-based device to connect to a domestic broadband network. Wonderful modern technology, isn't it?
Hint: If posting a story where the *opposite* actually sounds more shocking, you're not posting news. You're posting things people already know. News needs to be "new", true and (usually) unexpected, unusual, shocking, controversial etc.
From the sounds of it, Conroy is aiming for the Victorian era, somewhere around the latter 1800's.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
Even if for some bizarre reason your linux router wasn't supported (slow news day at slashdot maybe?), I doubt anyone would be at any real risk. Current deployment rate of the NBN should have most of Australia up to ADSL 1 levels by around 2030. Then watch as the government realises "Oh shit Australia has poor backbone connections to the US and Singapore and what we have done don't mean shit as we are all sharing the same tiny piece of pipe".
"National" Broadband Network.
Music to my ears.
You are welcome on my lawn.
6 pounds? What kind of tiny cats do you guys have? Now, if you'd said 5kg and 6kg I'd still think the cats were a little on the small side ...
For the record, my smaller cat is 6.5kg (perfect weight for frame) and the larger is 8.2kg (just very slightly overweight - perfect weight would be about 7.8kg).
The point of TFA is to explain that you will get an Ethernet jack as the end of the connection and that you dont need an expensive proprietary "router" that supports Fiber just to plug into the Fiber network. The connection to the fiber will be an ONT. Whether the ONT will be an IP device or just a passive device that handles the network layer isn't clear.