Hong Kong Protesters Use Mesh Networks To Organize
wabrandsma sends this article from New Scientist:
Hong Kong's mass protest is networked. Activists are relying on a free app that can send messages without any cellphone connection. Since the pro-democracy protests turned ugly over the weekend, many worry that the Chinese government would block local phone networks. In response, activists have turned to the FireChat app to send supportive messages and share the latest news. On Sunday alone, the app was downloaded more than 100,000 times in Hong Kong, its developers said. FireChat relies on "mesh networking," a technique that allows data to zip directly from one phone to another via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. Ordinarily, if two people want to communicate this way, they need to be fairly close together. But as more people join in, the network grows and messages can travel further. Mesh networks can be useful for people who are caught in natural disasters or, like those in Hong Kong, protesting under tricky conditions. FireChat came in handy for protesters in Taiwan and Iraq this year."
Interesting! I first heard that idea from David Brin, who was proposing it as something to be used for disasters.
http://davidbrin.wordpress.com...
Maybe the governent of Hong Kong qualifies as a disaster.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
Apparently, breakingnews at seattletimes dot com is looking for first hand Hong Kong reports from protestors.
Also, Yahoo has been turned off in much of Hong Kong so that residents can't find out about what's going on.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
FireChat requires that users create an account online (with an email address) before they can use the app. This and the lack of encryption limits its usefulness.
I've been saying this since the story about Terra Nova from Finland. All the money we spent after 9/11 on "wireless disaster preparedness" could have been covered by this idea alone.
For years I have also advocated having a B52 full of cheap mesh cell phones and base stations to drop on any Arab Spring like event.
-F34nor
I wonder if LTE D2D still works if the network gets turned off. Since its not out yet, wonder if there are kill switches.
We're jammin', we're jammin', we're jammin', we're jammin';
Hope you like jammin', too..
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Mesh networking, peer-to-peer, power to the decentralized people -- it all sounds great. But some of those people will still be on the side of the government. I wonder how much information one mesh node could accumulate to incriminate other participants? How many of "the people" will be willing to participate in an uprising like this if they know that a government stooge is likely no more than two or three hops away?
I've often enjoyed the zesty zip feature of miracle whip.
Firechat uses Apple's Multipeer connectivity for IOS, and a similar protocol for Android, to achieve a mesh network. I do not believe that any of this is MANET (the IETF's favorite mesh networking protocol).
Probably they mean it allows data to gzip directly from one phone to another. Nobody uses zip for network traffic.
It depends on bandwidth vs processing power.
Back in the 90s I used compression on networking due to having 56k bandwidth (yes thats 7 kB/s on LAN!). It actually increased file transfers quite a lot. However when switching to ethernet, bandwidth was no longer an issue and realtime compression actually slowed down file transfers. If the phones need to compress wifi data, then it would indicate really horrible bandwidth. I normally wouldn't think of that as an issue, but then again I don't put thousands of active wifi devices together in a small area.
I too am confused regarding the statement that they zip from one phone to another. I'm not even sure it is related to zip files or compression at all. Maybe it mean that it zaps from phone to phone multiple times until it reaches its destination, kind of like how lighting zaps around. That sentence is quite poorly written and would never have passed my quality control.
I am no expert in mesh networking, but I was under the impression that addressing in them does not scale well. The best technique seems to be BATMAN [1]. AFAIU it requires everynode to perform a full broadcast regularly and that each device stores a complete routing table to each other device. That will not scale to build a city wide network.
Somebody knows more?
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B....
Democracies should literally build their technology around mesh networks. Build everything off mesh something. Build everything around them and then take down all centralised systems and leave autocratic countries like China in the dark ages. Bitcoin is essentially mesh too. It's peer to peer.
" many worry that the Chinese government would block local phone networks."
The thing is the network can collapse by itself even without government action. Imagine Tens of thousands of phones concentrating in area.
though if you are MS you "squirt" it. ... damn I'm old
Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
...as simple as jamming all the frequencies? Jam the WiFi, jam the LTE, GSM, CDMA, whatever they use there. Boom. No more network. It only works because the people in power let it work, or are incompetent. Mesh networking isn't some immune savior of the people.