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Previously on "Impressive WiFi coverage"

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  • Joeman
    replied
    Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
    You would think so, but that's not what the German Supreme Court ruled in 2010 - linky
    Thats another good reason for UK to stay out of Europe!!
    However, for EUR100 you could download thousands in 'free' music and blame it on someone else - cheaper than iTunes

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    Originally posted by Joeman View Post
    As for legal issues about someone doing something dodgy on your FON - surely its the perfect get-out clause! your WIFI is open to the public so no court in the land could ever say without reasonable doubt that it was you doing the dodgy stuff, and therefore no conviction could ever stick.. worth running a FON spot just for that reason
    You would think so, but that's not what the German Supreme Court ruled in 2010 - linky

    Originally posted by Techdirt
    Germany's top criminal court ruled Wednesday that Internet users need to secure their private wireless connections by password to prevent unauthorized people from using their Web access to illegally download data.

    Internet users can be fined up to euro100 ($126) if a third party takes advantage of their unprotected WLAN connection to illegally download music or other files, the Karlsruhe-based court said in its verdict.

    Leave a comment:


  • darmstadt
    replied
    What I have over here with T-Online is a flatrate package which means that all T-Online wifi spots are included in my package. That means that anywhere that has one of these hotspots (over 60,000 of them in Germany) I can login and not get charged extra. The chain of hotels that I use has them which is nice so I don't need to pay for internet in hotels plus they are also worldwide and although I haven't signed up, yet, for that I still don't pay the amount a non-T-Online customer does. Quite helpful (don't BT have anything like that?)

    Leave a comment:


  • Joeman
    replied
    Ive got FON and ive used other people's FON spots a few times, but im not a fan on public WIFI as you never really know if its a legit hotspot or some scammer running a router with the same SSID.
    As for legal issues about someone doing something dodgy on your FON - surely its the perfect get-out clause! your WIFI is open to the public so no court in the land could ever say without reasonable doubt that it was you doing the dodgy stuff, and therefore no conviction could ever stick.. worth running a FON spot just for that reason

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    It was tulip quality last time I tried (a year ago).

    Leave a comment:


  • TimberWolf
    replied
    Originally posted by SimonMac View Post
    I am a member of this and its not as good as it looks, a lot of the advertised coverage relies on BTFon which is not included if you share your WiFi only if you are a BT Customer
    Have you got Fon or BT broadband?

    Leave a comment:


  • TimberWolf
    replied
    Originally posted by Paddy View Post
    Just looking at my local area I can confirm that the information on coverage is a load of bollocks
    Have you tried standing right outside someone's front door to get reception? Retail or larger establishments might be a better bet.

    Leave a comment:


  • Paddy
    replied
    Originally posted by TimberWolf View Post
    At least in England: Fon - Find Fon Hotspots Worldwide

    I'm tempted to ditch Virgin and go BT.

    Just looking at my local area I can confirm that the information on coverage is a load of bollocks

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    I'd be a little concerned about potential legal issues if someone downloads illegal material through my WiFi, which I think is why I didn't consider it much further.

    I know the homepage says that they take the heat
    Everyone who logs on to a Fon WiFi signal must be registered with Fon and must accept Fon's usage terms and conditions. We adhere to local and national internet access requirements, so if anyone tries to do anything illegal with your internet connection, we block them.
    but how do you stop someone who is using a VPN to do something illegal? Or does FON stop you connecting to a VPN? What about TOR (I don't know how that works at all, but I've heard about it somewhere)?

    Leave a comment:


  • Paddy
    replied
    Originally posted by SimonMac View Post
    I am a member of this and its not as good as it looks, a lot of the advertised coverage relies on BTFon which is not included if you share your WiFi only if you are a BT Customer
    Not much fon then

    Leave a comment:


  • SimonMac
    replied
    I am a member of this and its not as good as it looks, a lot of the advertised coverage relies on BTFon which is not included if you share your WiFi only if you are a BT Customer

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    You don't need to ditch Virgin, though - you just need to buy the FON router.

    I thought about it a while back - I think someone near my in-laws has one that I could then plug into.

    That said, the latest 2600 has some interesting information on hacking access to paid for hotspots

    Leave a comment:


  • TimberWolf
    started a topic Impressive WiFi coverage

    Impressive WiFi coverage

    At least in England: Fon - Find Fon Hotspots Worldwide

    I'm tempted to ditch Virgin and go BT.


    Become a 'fonero' or 'BTfonero'

    Another alternative is to get involved with Spanish company Fon, which is trying to turn the world into one giant hotspot through wireless connection sharing. The idea's simple, you buy a special wireless router (£33) which splits your connection in two; one secure part for you, and one open part for other members of the Fon community, who in exchange offer you use of the open part of their own wireless networks, wherever they are in the world.

    BT internet users needn't buy the Fon router at all, since BT's done a deal with the company allowing users to securely split their connections and become 'foneros' too, which gives the Fon community impressive overall coverage (see coverage maps). BT total broadband customers that sign up for the scheme now also get totally free access to BT's widespread 'OpenZone' hotspots, which usually costs up to £6/hour.
    Free Wireless Internet: UK hotspots & cheap 3G mobile web ...

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