Wi-Fi Piggybacking / Squatting Reconsidered

by on September 4, 2007 · 26 comments

The Times of London recently reported that a London man had been arrested “on suspicion of illegally logging on to a wireless (Wi-Fi) broadband connection.”

Two officers saw the 39-year-old man sitting on a garden wall outside a home in Chiswick, West London. When questioned he admitted using the homeowner’s unsecured broadband connection from his position on the wall. He was arrested and the case was passed to the Metropolitan Police Computer Crime Unit. He was bailed to return in October and faces a fine or a jail term of six months, or both. Detective Constable Mark Roberts gave warning that anyone caught illegally “hitching” or “piggy-backing” on to another’s wireless broadband connection could face arrest. “This arrest should act as a warning to anyone who thinks it is acceptable to illegally use other people’s broadband connections,” he said. “To do so potentially breaches the Computer Misuse Act and the Communications Act, so computer users need to be aware that this is unlawful and police will investigate any violation we become aware of.”

[The Wall Street Journal’s excellent business technology blogger Ben Worthen wrote about the case here and there are some really excellent comments following that story that you should check out.]

Our own Tim Lee has written about this issue here before in an essay entitled “In Defense of Piggybacking.” In that piece, which he later turned into a New York Times editorial, Tim argued that:

“…there’s absolutely nothing wrong with connecting to an unprotected network. True, it’s rude to saturate someone else’s pipe with massive downloads. But for casual Internet use—web browsing, email, or instant messaging—the bandwidth used is trivial. While it might seem weird or creepy to people not very familiar with the practice, once they become more familiar with it, I think people will realize how harmless it is.”

While I don’t believe anyone should be arrested for wireless piggybacking, I’m not sure I agree entirely with Tim’s view of things either since there may be some real harms that come to both users and service providers from uninhibited piggybacking / wireless squatting. Let me explain.

First, let me state that as a practical matter, there’s an easy solution to this whole mess from both an end-user and service provider perspective. Users can just lock down their networks, of course, and then largely take comfort in the fact that almost no one is going to take the time to hack into their system. As Tim noted in his essay, “Setting a wireless network password isn’t that hard” and even though most current generation wi-fi encryption has been cracked, it’s still probably good enough to serve as a reasonable deterrent.

Second, broadband providers could incentivize users to take steps to better secure their systems. One way to do so would be to better educate consumers about computer security / privacy. In-home installations or house calls by the service provider could even include the offer of wi-fi security set-up. A more controversial solution would be for broadband providers to meter pipe usage over a certain cap. That way, if squatters were sucking up tons of bandwidth on your pipe, you’d find out about it pretty quickly when you got your monthly bill and you would likely take steps to ensure they were excluded from your pipe. Or, in the case that you knew them, you might be able to convince them to pay for their share of the cost of monthly service.

But this really gets to the heart of my concern about the issue and it is where I find myself disagreeing a bit with Tim. Certainly there is some small cost associated with every use of a broadband pipe. It is difficult to measure that cost, of course, because networks are not like pencils. The economics are very different. Still, there are costs associated with all network usage and uses, no matter how marginal those costs may be at times.

Tim’s essay noted that most piggybacking today is probably of the casual variety. I would agree. Admit it, you’ve done it too! You’ve tapped into somebody else’s network to check your e-mail, an eBay auction, or your blog. Well, at least that’s why I have piggybacked in the past!

But while such casual use is likely representative of most piggybacking it is not necessarily representative of all piggybacking. Clearly, there are some people who piggyback for significant periods of time, sometimes even accidentally. Indeed, I will admit that there have been times when I have been on the road and piggybacked on someone’s network with the intention of just quickly checking my e-mail only to later suddenly realize I’d been online for an hour! That’s hardly casual use. But is it “harmful” use? Am I engaging in a “harmful trespass” on someone’s private wi-fi network when I spend an hour on it versus two minutes. Should the length or purpose of the use determine the “harm” or lack thereof?

What really makes me wonder about this now more than ever is that several people in my neighborhood have, like me, joined the “Pre-N” wi-fi generation, which allows for much wider area coverage. I have a wonderful little wi-fi radar on my Toshiba laptop that detects all the wireless networks in range and maps them for me according to capability (B, G, N) and accessibility (locked or unlocked). The map is intriguing. I can drive down any road in the area and watch networks bounce in and out of range as if they were planes on an air traffic control system.

But what’s really interesting about the radar is how I’ve used it to watch wi-fi spread in my own neighborhood and seen the overall “footprint” grow to encompass almost all 15 homes on my block. The new “N” standard routers have been a big part of that. I can tell you exactly when anyone on my street gets a new pre-N router because suddenly their SSID pops up on my radar, and it’s usually completely unsecured. Pretty soon, we’ll have the accidental equivalent of a muni wi-fi network in my little neighborhood thanks to the existence of a few unsecured pre-N routers at select points along the block!

One might ask: What’s wrong with that? In fact, Tim argued in his essay that “some people might make their network connections available to the world on purpose, as a neighborly gesture.” True, but many others do not intend to do so. Again, if they didn’t intend to invite others share their service on occasion, they should have taken steps to lock down their networks. But if they didn’t take those steps and someone abused that fact by squatting on their network and engaging in massive downloading activities, do they have any right of action at all against the “intruder.”

But here’s a really interesting question: What if my entire neighborhood got together and agreed to share wi-fi as a “neighborly gesture.” I could easily devise the plan for my homeowner’s association. I’d identify 4 or 5 key spots along the block where we would need the homeowner to install a pre-N router. Then, all the homeowners could chip into a “piggyback piggybank.” The 4 or 5 homeowners with pre-N routers could just connect to the 15 meg service that Cox offers in our neighborhood or the 30 meg service the Verizon offers via FIOS.

The problem, of course, is that this represents theft of service from a carrier perspective. And that’s not because the cable and telco operators are just a bunch of greedy bastards. It’s because they have a legitimate business problem on their hands if they were to go around digging holes and laying high-speed lines to everyone’s homes only to see many people share it with everyone else as a “neighborly gesture.” The fixed costs associated with a capital-intensive industry like this are enormous and it’s highly unlikely that Verizon or Cox or anyone else would ever wire a neighborhood for next-generation broadband if they didn’t have some reasonable expectation of getting a return on that investment in the long-term.

This is the other reason I believe that uninhibited piggybacking is not completely without harm / consequences. If we want those networks to get built we have to understand that unlimited network sharing has to carry some consequences. That’s why it is probably necessary to find ways to deter the most egregious uses. Again, no one has any real problem with a little casual use at the margins, but my point here is that not everything takes place at the margin on a “casual” basis. Some piggybacking activities impose real costs and could result in real harm. That harm might be direct to the user in the form of rising monthly bills, termination of service, or computer corruption / other privacy loses. Alternatively, that harm could be longer-term and more indirect in nature, as would be the case if broadband operators refused to provide next-generation services for fear of the inability to recoup the significant sunk investments it entails.

So, I’ll wrap up by returning to the sticky question of whether there should ever be a time when anyone is arrested for wi-fi piggybacking? Well, I’m a non-interventionist, pacifistic, libertarian sort of guy who rarely likes the idea of anyone ever being arrested for non-coercive crimes of any sort. So perhaps I’m the wrong guy to be answering that question!

Nonetheless, if you clearly and egregiously bring harm to someone by trespassing on their private property, I can see a role for government. In the case of wireless piggybacking, however, I would want to see it limited to only the most extreme cases. Even in those cases, however, I don’t think jail time is appropriate. I’d rather just see the homeowner or the broadband provider sue the guy for damages and make him pay his fair share of the bill that he racked up or pay for any real harm he had done, if it could be proven in court.

And, again, a little consumer education and healthy dose of metered broadband pricing will probably solve this problem in the long run.

Now, please excuse me while I go post this essay to our blog by tapping into my neighbor’s wi-fi network. (No, just kidding!)

  • http://www.davidmcelroy.org/ David McElroy

    If you don’t want people to share your WiFi connection, don’t leave it open. How difficult is that simple rule? If you are opening your connection in such a way that it is free and clear to anybody from outside your property, I can’t see how anybody can be faulted for using the signal. If these so-called poachers had to encroach on your private property to use the signal, it would be different, but if you’re putting a signal out there onto public air waves that’s open for the world to use, it’s fair for the taking, IMO. Laws that try to criminalize this make no more sense than laws that might try to criminalize using light that falls from a floodlight on private property.

  • http://techdirt.com/ Mike Masnick

    Adam, it seems that your scenario in which there’s harm done to the business models of the carriers is highly speculative. There are very, very few cases where people are setting up neighborhood collectives and ditching their own providers. In fact, there are some serious costs to doing so. What if the network goes down or the router needs to be reset and the person who owns the router isn’t home?

    Besides the crux of your argument that this sort of thing would harm the business models of broadband providers doesn’t ring true either. You could just as easily say that Verizon is harming the business model of Cox in your neighborhood… since without Verizon, Cox would have probably twice the users.

    If people choose not to buy service from a provider, that’s a marketing problem for the provider. It is not a “harm” that needs to be protected.

    So, no, I still don’t see where there’s harm. I only see marketing challenges for the providers — which is quite a different thing. You would never suggest that Verizon be blocked because it harms Cox, right? So why are you suggesting that people sharing WiFi harms Cox? It’s effectively the same exact thing.

  • http://www.davidmcelroy.org/ David McElroy

    If you don’t want people to share your WiFi connection, don’t leave it open. How difficult is that simple rule? If you are opening your connection in such a way that it is free and clear to anybody from outside your property, I can’t see how anybody can be faulted for using the signal. If these so-called poachers had to encroach on your private property to use the signal, it would be different, but if you’re putting a signal out there onto public air waves that’s open for the world to use, it’s fair for the taking, IMO. Laws that try to criminalize this make no more sense than laws that might try to criminalize using light that falls from a floodlight on private property.

  • http://techdirt.com/ Mike Masnick

    Adam, it seems that your scenario in which there’s harm done to the business models of the carriers is highly speculative. There are very, very few cases where people are setting up neighborhood collectives and ditching their own providers. In fact, there are some serious costs to doing so. What if the network goes down or the router needs to be reset and the person who owns the router isn’t home?

    Besides the crux of your argument that this sort of thing would harm the business models of broadband providers doesn’t ring true either. You could just as easily say that Verizon is harming the business model of Cox in your neighborhood… since without Verizon, Cox would have probably twice the users.

    If people choose not to buy service from a provider, that’s a marketing problem for the provider. It is not a “harm” that needs to be protected.

    So, no, I still don’t see where there’s harm. I only see marketing challenges for the providers — which is quite a different thing. You would never suggest that Verizon be blocked because it harms Cox, right? So why are you suggesting that people sharing WiFi harms Cox? It’s effectively the same exact thing.

  • Lewis Baumstark

    I find it difficult to believe piggybacking is theft-of-service, provided the paying customer is ok with the piggybacking. It may be (and probably is) a breach-of-contract with the ISP, but not theft in any reasonable sense of the word.

  • Lewis Baumstark

    I find it difficult to believe piggybacking is theft-of-service, provided the paying customer is ok with the piggybacking. It may be (and probably is) a breach-of-contract with the ISP, but not theft in any reasonable sense of the word.

  • Adam Thierer

    Mike… You correctly note that “There are very, very few cases where people are setting up neighborhood collectives and ditching their own providers.” That’s true, and I’m not sure there ever will be formal collective approaches for some of the reasons you mention. However, we won’t know for a few years until next-gen wireless networking technologies are more widely distributed in homes. Mass wi-fi sharing is simply not feasible with today’s 802 B & G standard equipment and their limit signal range.

    Regardless, the point of my essay was that (a) if the technology is up to speed (or range) and (b) enough people decide to share instead of buy, then I do think there is a harm worth considering. Now, it could be the case that this is just a new type of “marketing challenges for the providers” that they will respond to using new business models and pricing plans, which is why I spent time talking about metered billing above. I really do think that’s the sensible solution. (To be clear, what I think would be most efficient is what economists call a “Ramsey two-part tariff” that would involve a flat fee for service up to a certain level and then a per-unit / metered fee over a certain level: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_part_tariff)

    Regardless, I still feel there may be cases of unauthorized use that, on occasion, require a legal remedy. Let me ask you how you feel about a classic example of harmful network sharing that already has been litigated.

    In the field of cable television, many consumers use splitters to redirect cable lines all around their house. No problem there, of course, because it’s personal use and you paid for the line into the home. But there have been cases involving homeowners splitting their cable and then sharing it with many homes in the vicinity or with an entire apartment complex, for example. The rise of digital signals and digital set-top boxes has alleviated this problem to some extent. In the old analog days, however, it was more difficult to combat such signal theft and that sometimes meant that the cable provider had to take legal action against the person splitting and sharing the signal with others since it was a clear violation of contract / terms of service.

    Would it be your position that there was no harm in that case or, if there was, that the industry just needed to “find a better business model”? Stated differently, is there EVER a time when you feel that a service provider should be able to enforce the terms of service / contract against someone? Because it strikes me that this closely parallels the situation that may develop in the world of wireless networking in coming years. The vast majority of cases will not need to be litigated, but some might.

  • http://www.manifestdensity.net Tom

    In the field of cable television, many consumers use splitters to redirect cable lines all around their house. No problem there, of course, because it’s personal use and you paid for the line into the home.

    I’m pretty sure that some cable companies try to charge for each termination (even for analog). It’s pretty dumb, but there it is.

    You correctly note that “There are very, very few cases where people are setting up neighborhood collectives and ditching their own providers.” That’s true, and I’m not sure there ever will be formal collective approaches for some of the reasons you mention. However, we won’t know for a few years until next-gen wireless networking technologies are more widely distributed in homes. Mass wi-fi sharing is simply not feasible with today’s 802 B & G standard equipment and their limit signal range.

    It’s true that this hasn’t really taken off yet, but it’s completely feasible. Spend enough time on Slashdot and you’ll hear plenty of folks talking about how they got their neighbors together and purchased T1 service. It does require some technical know-how, but a $50 router loaded with open-source firmware can operate as a top-notch wifi repeater. I set one up this weekend, in fact — it works great for spreading my girlfriend’s neighbor’s otherwise-hard-to-get signal throughout her apartment. She’ll be giving the neighbor ten bucks or so a month, and he doesn’t need to do anything besides share his WEP key — not even allow the router to be placed in his house. $50-100 per household is not a very big infrastructure investment for setting up a connection sharing arrangement. If only one router is required, it’ll actually end up being cheaper than the hardware required by an individual hookup.

    Of course the other reason you haven’t heard about these assuredly-extant arrangements — besides the technical knowledge currently required — is the previously mentioned fact that sharing a connection violates most ISPs terms of service. But I don’t think this is very compelling: SpeakEasy, a DSL reseller with a heavy focus on customer service, specifically allows and even encourages this sort of arrangement. Users pay a slight premium for SpeakEasy service ($5 or $10/month), but it seems to be a sustainable business model.

    Unfortunately, getting SpeakEasy installed tends to be a huge PITA due to their reliance on ILECs for part of the installation process.

    I say it so often that I hesitate to repeat it, but I think the answer is metered bandwidth. Until users have an obvious incentive to examine whether they want to share their connections or not, they won’t think about this seriously (and until the miniscule cost of piggybacking is made obvious, the courts will treat it much too seriously).

    Aside from that, routers that ship with encryption enabled would help (the unit’s serial number makes a handy default key). It also wouldn’t kill router manufacturers to spend a little more time on their firmware in general. There’s no reason why I shouldn’t be able to get an email whenever a new MAC address shows up on my network, with links allowing me to allow or deny access.

  • http://www.jerrybrito.com Jerry Brito

    Coase Theorem, Adam. What’s the least costly way of dealing with harm to the consumer? Expecting people to lock down their networks or arresting people for piggybacking? What’s the least costly way of dealing with harm to the network provider? A term in their contract with their customer requiring network lock or arresting people?

  • http://www.techliberation.com Adam Thierer

    Mike… You correctly note that “There are very, very few cases where people are setting up neighborhood collectives and ditching their own providers.” That’s true, and I’m not sure there ever will be formal collective approaches for some of the reasons you mention. However, we won’t know for a few years until next-gen wireless networking technologies are more widely distributed in homes. Mass wi-fi sharing is simply not feasible with today’s 802 B & G standard equipment and their limit signal range.

    Regardless, the point of my essay was that (a) if the technology is up to speed (or range) and (b) enough people decide to share instead of buy, then I do think there is a harm worth considering. Now, it could be the case that this is just a new type of “marketing challenges for the providers” that they will respond to using new business models and pricing plans, which is why I spent time talking about metered billing above. I really do think that’s the sensible solution. (To be clear, what I think would be most efficient is what economists call a “Ramsey two-part tariff” that would involve a flat fee for service up to a certain level and then a per-unit / metered fee over a certain level:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_part_tariff)

    Regardless, I still feel there may be cases of unauthorized use that, on occasion, require a legal remedy. Let me ask you how you feel about a classic example of harmful network sharing that already has been litigated.

    In the field of cable television, many consumers use splitters to redirect cable lines all around their house. No problem there, of course, because it’s personal use and you paid for the line into the home. But there have been cases involving homeowners splitting their cable and then sharing it with many homes in the vicinity or with an entire apartment complex, for example. The rise of digital signals and digital set-top boxes has alleviated this problem to some extent. In the old analog days, however, it was more difficult to combat such signal theft and that sometimes meant that the cable provider had to take legal action against the person splitting and sharing the signal with others since it was a clear violation of contract / terms of service.

    Would it be your position that there was no harm in that case or, if there was, that the industry just needed to “find a better business model”? Stated differently, is there EVER a time when you feel that a service provider should be able to enforce the terms of service / contract against someone? Because it strikes me that this closely parallels the situation that may develop in the world of wireless networking in coming years. The vast majority of cases will not need to be litigated, but some might.

  • Adam Thierer

    Jerry, I thought I made it perfectly clear above that “I don’t think jail time is appropriate” for this problem and that using consumer education, innovative billing menthods, new business models was preferable. But, as you suggest, contractual enforcement may come into play as well. How would you suggest that the terms of service be enforced? I don’t think people should be arrested, but I don’t have any problem with some of them being sued for egregiously violating the terms of service.

  • Adam Thierer

    I want to second two things that Tom said above in his comment. Obviously, I wholeheartedly agree with his argument that “the answer is metered bandwidth. Until users have an obvious incentive to examine whether they want to share their connections or not, they won’t think about this seriously.” That is exactly right.

    Second, I agree “routers that ship with encryption enabled would help..” and that “It also wouldn’t kill router manufacturers to spend a little more time on their firmware in general.” Even though many of us here now how to configure our networks and devices, this stuff can be quite challenging for many consumers. They could use some help and things like this–plus some help from their broadband providers–would go a long way toward solving this problem. Hell, sometimes even I get lost in world of wi-fi acronym hell (MACs, SSIDs, DHCP, WPA, WEP, etc).

  • http://www.manifestdensity.net Tom

    In the field of cable television, many consumers use splitters to redirect cable lines all around their house. No problem there, of course, because it’s personal use and you paid for the line into the home.

    I’m pretty sure that some cable companies try to charge for each termination (even for analog). It’s pretty dumb, but there it is.

    You correctly note that “There are very, very few cases where people are setting up neighborhood collectives and ditching their own providers.” That’s true, and I’m not sure there ever will be formal collective approaches for some of the reasons you mention. However, we won’t know for a few years until next-gen wireless networking technologies are more widely distributed in homes. Mass wi-fi sharing is simply not feasible with today’s 802 B & G standard equipment and their limit signal range.

    It’s true that this hasn’t really taken off yet, but it’s completely feasible. Spend enough time on Slashdot and you’ll hear plenty of folks talking about how they got their neighbors together and purchased T1 service. It does require some technical know-how, but a $50 router loaded with open-source firmware can operate as a top-notch wifi repeater. I set one up this weekend, in fact — it works great for spreading my girlfriend’s neighbor’s otherwise-hard-to-get signal throughout her apartment. She’ll be giving the neighbor ten bucks or so a month, and he doesn’t need to do anything besides share his WEP key — not even allow the router to be placed in his house. $50-100 per household is not a very big infrastructure investment for setting up a connection sharing arrangement. If only one router is required, it’ll actually end up being cheaper than the hardware required by an individual hookup.

    Of course the other reason you haven’t heard about these assuredly-extant arrangements — besides the technical knowledge currently required — is the previously mentioned fact that sharing a connection violates most ISPs terms of service. But I don’t think this is very compelling: SpeakEasy, a DSL reseller with a heavy focus on customer service, specifically allows and even encourages this sort of arrangement. Users pay a slight premium for SpeakEasy service ($5 or $10/month), but it seems to be a sustainable business model.

    Unfortunately, getting SpeakEasy installed tends to be a huge PITA due to their reliance on ILECs for part of the installation process.

    I say it so often that I hesitate to repeat it, but I think the answer is metered bandwidth. Until users have an obvious incentive to examine whether they want to share their connections or not, they won’t think about this seriously (and until the miniscule cost of piggybacking is made obvious, the courts will treat it much too seriously).

    Aside from that, routers that ship with encryption enabled would help (the unit’s serial number makes a handy default key). It also wouldn’t kill router manufacturers to spend a little more time on their firmware in general. There’s no reason why I shouldn’t be able to get an email whenever a new MAC address shows up on my network, with links allowing me to allow or deny access.

  • http://jerrybrito.com Jerry Brito

    Coase Theorem, Adam. What’s the least costly way of dealing with harm to the consumer? Expecting people to lock down their networks or arresting people for piggybacking? What’s the least costly way of dealing with harm to the network provider? A term in their contract with their customer requiring network lock or arresting people?

  • Adam Thierer

    Jerry, I thought I made it perfectly clear above that “I don’t think jail time is appropriate” for this problem and that using consumer education, innovative billing menthods, new business models was preferable. But, as you suggest, contractual enforcement may come into play as well. How would you suggest that the terms of service be enforced? I don’t think people should be arrested, but I don’t have any problem with some of them being sued for egregiously violating the terms of service.

  • Adam Thierer

    I want to second two things that Tom said above in his comment. Obviously, I wholeheartedly agree with his argument that “the answer is metered bandwidth. Until users have an obvious incentive to examine whether they want to share their connections or not, they won’t think about this seriously.” That is exactly right.

    Second, I agree “routers that ship with encryption enabled would help..” and that “It also wouldn’t kill router manufacturers to spend a little more time on their firmware in general.” Even though many of us here now how to configure our networks and devices, this stuff can be quite challenging for many consumers. They could use some help and things like this–plus some help from their broadband providers–would go a long way toward solving this problem. Hell, sometimes even I get lost in world of wi-fi acronym hell (MACs, SSIDs, DHCP, WPA, WEP, etc).

  • eric

    When Jesus and his disciples were walking through a field on the Sabbath day, they were hungry and they took a little of the grain from the plants to eat. Interestingly, the Pharisees did not accuse them of theft, but of working on the Sabbath.

    It is a principle of Old Testament law (and judging by Christ’s actions, He had not problem with it) that incidental taking of a small amount of your neighbor’s abundantly available “stuff” (we’re not talking about inside another person’s dwelling here) is a principle of good neighborliness and a liberal (in the best sense of that word) society. If the discliples had harvested a bushel or two, that would be wrong.

    I conclude that allowing passersby or even neighbors to make light use of your WiFi connection is the Christian thing to do.

  • eric

    When Jesus and his disciples were walking through a field on the Sabbath day, they were hungry and they took a little of the grain from the plants to eat. Interestingly, the Pharisees did not accuse them of theft, but of working on the Sabbath.

    It is a principle of Old Testament law (and judging by Christ’s actions, He had not problem with it) that incidental taking of a small amount of your neighbor’s abundantly available “stuff” (we’re not talking about inside another person’s dwelling here) is a principle of good neighborliness and a liberal (in the best sense of that word) society. If the discliples had harvested a bushel or two, that would be wrong.

    I conclude that allowing passersby or even neighbors to make light use of your WiFi connection is the Christian thing to do.

  • http://www.manifestdensity.net Tom

    While I’m thinking of it, let me plug the La Fonera project, which supplies cheap routers to users that are preconfigured for sharing — you can set bandwidth caps, whitelist certain sites, or even charge for sharing your connection. The routers provide two SSIDs — one for public use and another unthrottled, unencrypted one for your own use. I’ve got one running and have been pleased with it (although admittedly it doesn’t serve my primary SSID, so I wouldn’t notice right away if it went down).

  • http://www.manifestdensity.net Tom

    While I’m thinking of it, let me plug the La Fonera project, which supplies cheap routers to users that are preconfigured for sharing — you can set bandwidth caps, whitelist certain sites, or even charge for sharing your connection. The routers provide two SSIDs — one for public use and another unthrottled, unencrypted one for your own use. I’ve got one running and have been pleased with it (although admittedly it doesn’t serve my primary SSID, so I wouldn’t notice right away if it went down).

  • Laurel Lee

    Maybe the wifi piggybacking problem works out like this.

    The trespasser is not the person who accesses wifi while off the property of the subscriber. The trespasser is the subscriber who buys more service than his property can contain. Like most wrongdoers, he thinks a good offense is the best defense.

    The offensive defense serves the interest of wifi providers because it saves them the overhead of tailor-making their product to the dimensions of the property of each subscriber.

    The closest parallel in legal precedents occurred when citizen band radios became popular and there was an upsurge in ham radio operators. Transmissions from one property interfered with television reception at neighboring properties. Legal experts did not blame the victim that time around. They acknowledged who really trespassed on whom and protected the reception rights of neighbors.

    Another analogy is the person who throws money out the window of a speeding car. Come on. The person who picks up the money has committed no wrong. The tosser deliberately or carelessly contributed a part of his wealth to the public domain. The public scarfed up what it could.

  • Laurel Lee

    Maybe the wifi piggybacking problem works out like this.

    The trespasser is not the person who accesses wifi while off the property of the subscriber. The trespasser is the subscriber who buys more service than his property can contain. Like most wrongdoers, he thinks a good offense is the best defense.

    The offensive defense serves the interest of wifi providers because it saves them the overhead of tailor-making their product to the dimensions of the property of each subscriber.

    The closest parallel in legal precedents occurred when citizen band radios became popular and there was an upsurge in ham radio operators. Transmissions from one property interfered with television reception at neighboring properties. Legal experts did not blame the victim that time around. They acknowledged who really trespassed on whom and protected the reception rights of neighbors.

    Another analogy is the person who throws money out the window of a speeding car. Come on. The person who picks up the money has committed no wrong. The tosser deliberately or carelessly contributed a part of his wealth to the public domain. The public scarfed up what it could.

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    If you live in New York, you know this is a very common practice, since everyone in the apartment building is so close together. I don’t think it’s a big deal, personally.

  • http://www.secureyourtrademark.com trademark registration

    If you live in New York, you know this is a very common practice, since everyone in the apartment building is so close together. I don’t think it’s a big deal, personally.

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