Wireless Networking Article on Unsecured Networks

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Subject Author Date
Article on Unsecured Networks Agent777 08-02-05
Posted by Agent777 on August 2, 2005, 6:30 pm
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This guy seems to think it is OK to "poach" your neighbor's signal.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1842378,00.asp
        
The Right Analogy for Wireless Signal Spill
ARTICLE DATE: 08.01.05
By John C. Dvorak

We're starting to see more and more articles in local newspapers with
various slants on the fact that people are routinely poaching the
spillover signals coming from unprotected Wi-Fi networks. Some
researchers indicate that as many as two-thirds of Wi-Fi signals in the
U.S. are not secured by WEP or any sort of encryption or tunneling.

Since it doesn't really take much to secure a network, you can assume
that people do not mind you taking their Wi-Fi signals to do your
e-mail. What people probably would not appreciate would be you loading
up on porn or making terrorist threats on their dime with their IP
address. What to do?

First of all, if you want to share your signal, you are probably not
allowed to do so by your ISP agreement. But let's say you want to
anyway. What is needed is a system to do it properly, such as a splash
screen intercept and log-on of guest users, so you can at least have
some record of who is using the connection. This would also allow you to
do some monitoring of activity, in case the FBI comes knocking.

But let's face it, most people do not know that their signal is being
poached, and probably don't care. So why should so many people be
freaked out about it? With nearly 15 million Wi-Fi networks in the U.S.
and perhaps 10 million of them unsecured, how many nefarious acts are
being committed by poachers? Most people using these networks are doing
it for an e-mail hit or a Web site visit and not much more. Often
poachers simply use a neighbor's connection, and latching onto the
signal is just a way to save money. I know at least two people doing this.

The problem I have with this activity is with the way it is described—as
signal theft. I prefer to call it poaching. There is really nothing
being stolen. The other user is paying a flat fee, and the worst that
can happen is that his or her bandwidth takes a small hit for an
inconsequential moment.

"It's like leaving the house unlocked," I'm told. "Just because there is
no lock on the door doesn't mean you can walk in and take things." This
is one of the dopey analogies you have to listen to. The analogy is bad.
Walking into an unlocked home is not the same as hooking onto someone's
Wi-Fi signal that is being broadcast all over the neighborhood. For one
thing, no trespassing is being committed. The signal is being given to
you. It's more like the unlocked house having a sign on the door saying
"Welcome! Please enter!"— Continue reading...

Let's drop the house analogy and find something better and more
accurate. Here is what Wi-Fi spillage is like. Someone has a house and a
big lawn and a sprinkler system that is watering the lawn and spraying
the water into the street. You drive into the water spraying into the
street and use it to wash your car. Are you stealing the water? It's not
your water. Someone else paid for it and you are using it. Just like the
Wi-Fi signal.

One might argue that this isn't the same, since the bandwidth is reduced
when you poach a Wi-Fi signal. Okay, then let's take the analogy and say
that the water is not going into the street and down the sewer. The
sprinkler is spraying only a little bit past the lawn, onto the sidewalk
and the thin strip of lawn between the sidewalk and the curb. The
sidewalk is public property, and when you walk on the sidewalk you get
wet and keep that water from going to the grassy curb area. Is this
stealing the guy's water?

Maybe readers can come up with better and more apt analogies than this,
but this comes close. If you are being soaked by a hose, are you
stealing water? You didn't ask to be soaked. You didn't go turn on the
water yourself. You didn't run onto the lawn. How is the sprinkler
situation different from someone blasting 802.11 signals all over town?

The person who owns the signal has to be the responsible party. Grabbing
a nearby signal because it is being beamed into your house or car is
hardly the same as going into an unlocked residence and stealing the
silverware. And it's not hacking if the signal is not protected. In
fact, if I'm getting unprotected signals on my property from people
nearby, they're the ones who are trespassing! What if I do not want
these signals interfering with what I want to do?

The way I see it, if someone is shoving a signal down my throat like
that, I have every right to use it any way I want to as long, as I'm not
doing anything illegal. It's crazy to think that my using that intrusive
signal is illegal.

Discuss this article in the forums.

Go off-topic with John C. Dvorak here.

More John C. Dvorak:
Copyright (c) 2005 Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Posted by Floyd L. Davidson on August 2, 2005, 11:11 pm
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>This guy seems to think it is OK to "poach" your neighbor's signal.
>
>http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,1842378,00.asp
>
>The Right Analogy for Wireless Signal Spill
>ARTICLE DATE: 08.01.05
>By John C. Dvorak

I didn't read past that last line. Dvorak has always been
somewhat of a dufus. I guess he writes a good story, because
he's been making a living at it for a long time now. But he has
*never* been able to understand technical details, or the the
legal aspects for that matter.

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com

Posted by Agent777 on August 3, 2005, 2:27 pm
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Floyd L. Davidson wrote:

> I didn't read past that last line. Dvorak has always been
> somewhat of a dufus. I guess he writes a good story, because
> he's been making a living at it for a long time now. But he has
> *never* been able to understand technical details, or the the
> legal aspects for that matter.

You should have read it if just for chuckles. You missed these tidbits:

Here is what Wi-Fi spillage is like. Someone has a house and a big lawn
and a sprinkler system that is watering the lawn and spraying the water
into the street. You drive into the water spraying into the street and
use it to wash your car. Are you stealing the water? It's not your
water. Someone else paid for it and you are using it. Just like the
Wi-Fi signal.

And it's not hacking if the signal is not protected. In fact, if I'm
getting unprotected signals on my property from people nearby, they're
the ones who are trespassing!

Posted by frankdowling1@yahoo.com on August 3, 2005, 7:33 pm
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An article detailing the issues as it relates to " poaching" Satellite
TV.

http://www.iswatchingsatellitetvacrime.tk/



Agent777 wrote:
> Floyd L. Davidson wrote:
>
> > I didn't read past that last line. Dvorak has always been
> > somewhat of a dufus. I guess he writes a good story, because
> > he's been making a living at it for a long time now. But he has
> > *never* been able to understand technical details, or the the
> > legal aspects for that matter.
>
> You should have read it if just for chuckles. You missed these tidbits:
>
> Here is what Wi-Fi spillage is like. Someone has a house and a big lawn
> and a sprinkler system that is watering the lawn and spraying the water
> into the street. You drive into the water spraying into the street and
> use it to wash your car. Are you stealing the water? It's not your
> water. Someone else paid for it and you are using it. Just like the
> Wi-Fi signal.
>
> And it's not hacking if the signal is not protected. In fact, if I'm
> getting unprotected signals on my property from people nearby, they're
> the ones who are trespassing!


Posted by Floyd L. Davidson on August 4, 2005, 12:48 am
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>Floyd L. Davidson wrote:
>
>> I didn't read past that last line. Dvorak has always been
>> somewhat of a dufus. I guess he writes a good story, because
>> he's been making a living at it for a long time now. But he has
>> *never* been able to understand technical details, or the the
>> legal aspects for that matter.
>
>You should have read it if just for chuckles. You missed these tidbits:

Sounds like a classic Dvorak article, eh?

>Here is what Wi-Fi spillage is like. Someone has a house and a
>big lawn and a sprinkler system that is watering the lawn and
>spraying the water into the street. You drive into the water
>spraying into the street and use it to wash your car. Are you
>stealing the water? It's not your water. Someone else paid for
>it and you are using it. Just like the Wi-Fi signal.
>
>And it's not hacking if the signal is not protected. In fact, if
>I'm getting unprotected signals on my property from people
>nearby, they're the ones who are trespassing!

--
Floyd L. Davidson <http://www.apaflo.com/floyd_davidson>
Ukpeagvik (Barrow, Alaska) floyd@apaflo.com

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