i saw this article in the paper last week, it appears to have made
its way onto the nycwireless mailing list.  more on the ongoing saga
re: putting the smack down on subs last week. 

----- Forwarded message from Anthony Townsend <anthony.townsend at nyu.edu> -----

From: "Anthony Townsend" <anthony.townsend at nyu.edu>
To: "NYCwireless List" <nycwireless at lists.spack.org>
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2600.0000
Subject: [nycwireless] Investor's Business Daily - "Broadband Providers Begin To Crack Down On Subscribers Who Share Connections"
Date: Mon, 29 Jul 2002 11:03:14 -0400

> Broadband Providers Begin To Crack Down On Subscribers Who Share
> Connections.  Some Subscribers Will Switch. Time Warner Cable and
> AT&T Broadband warning against broadband sharing
>
> By MIKE ANGELL Investor's Business Daily, Thursday, July 25, 2002
>
> What started as a hobby among Web enthusiasts now is getting harsh
> looks from Internet service providers. Wireless networking
> technology, sometimes called WiFi or 802.11b, was designed to make a
> home DSL or cable modem connection available to anybody inside the
> subscriber's house. But wireless enthusiasts are extending that
> reach to include friends and neighbors who don't pay for the
> connection. That's drawing the ire of broadband providers, who are
> beginning to crack down on such sharing. But in doing so, ISPs risk
> losing the tech-savvy customers who buy and recommend such services.
> "I recommend broadband service providers to my grandparents, to my
> friends, to others," said Adam Shand, founder of the Portland,
> Ore.-based group Personal Telco Project. "I'm going to recommend
> ISPs that work with enthusiasts, not those that go after them."
> Shand uses an ISP that doesn't restrict sharing. But that's not the
> policy at Time Warner Cable and AT&T Broadband. This month, Time
> Warner Cable sent letters to 10 users in New York giving them three
> days to stop sharing their high-speed cable modem connections with
> other people. If they didn't comply, Time Warner said, it would cut
> their service. Time Warner didn't say whether the users had
> complied. "When you contract for high-speed access, it's for your
> use in your household and not to share with neighbors," said Time
> Warner spokeswoman Suzanne Giuliani. AT&T Broadband also plans to
> contact users who are sharing connections. AT&T Broadband didn't say
> how many such users it had identified. In both cases, subscribers to
> high-speed cable modem Internet access are letting nonsubscribers
> share connections through WiFi technology. Sharing, or stealing, the
> service is as simple as setting up an antenna on the roof of your
> house, Shand says. Up to 50 people can use one connection. The
> signal can go as far as 20 miles. Time Warner found out about the
> usage through Web postings on a site run by a group called
> NYCWireless that offers free, mobile Internet access through WiFi.
>

> Giuliani says the company learned about the theft because of the
> postings. "It's not like we have investigative teams roaming the
> streets," Giuliani said.  NYCWireless spokesman Anthony Townsend
> says the group doesn't advocate breaking subscriber agreements.
> Rather, members should use business Internet connections rather than
> home Internet connections. Business connections usually don't
> restrict the number of users. A business DSL connection can cost $
> 100 a month vs. $ 45 to $ 60 for home DSL or cable modem service.
> Most NYCWireless members use smaller ISPs that don't restrict the
> number of users on one connection. Townsend says Time Warner's
> actions don't build good relations in the tech community. "They are
> developing a very nasty relationship with people who were the first
> to get broadband," Townsend said. AT&T Broadband looks for people
> who post messages on online bulletin boards about the broadband
> theft. They're double-checked by AT&T technicians scanning the area
> around a subscriber's home for WiFi signals. Spokeswoman Sara Eder
> says AT&T may begin routine checks for broadband sharing. Just as
> AT&T checks neighborhoods for cable thieves, it may start random
> checks for WiFi broadband sharing. "We're watching this carefully,"
> Eder said. "In some cases, we have trolled communities" for WiFi
> signals. Eder says such broadband theft is a small portion of
> bandwidth usage. NYCWireless says it has 70 New York hot spots where
> people can log onto the Internet wirelessly. And Shand's Personal
> Telco Project has about 50 hot spots around Portland. Giuliani says sharing
> a broadband connection leaves the original subscriber vulnerable.
> Anyone can find passwords, access personal accounts or use the
> connection illicitly without fear of being caught.
>
> Copyright 2002 Investor's Business Daily, Inc. Investor's Business
> Daily

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-- 
steve ulrich                       sulrich at botwerks.org
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