Wed Apr 16, 2008 12:00PM EDT
See Comments (42)
I've discussed, with many of you here and offline, the complicated legal and moral debate surrounding so-called Wi-Fi leeching, or the use of another person's wireless signal without permission. While many see borrowing someone else's openly broadcast wireless signal as a crime, others find it a victimless one at worst, amounting to something about as heinous as throwing an apple core into someone else's trash.
The state of Maryland is becoming one of the first states, if not the first state, to side with the latter viewpoint. Its state Judiciary Committee has reported "unfavorably" on a bill that would officially criminalize Wi-Fi hitchhiking, subjecting violators to punishments ranging from a $1,000 fine to three years in jail. If the access point is password-protected, the punishments could hit $10,000 and ten years in jail. Ten years in the slammer for using another person's router! Yow!
Numerous cases of unauthorized Wi-Fi use have hit the court systems in recent years, with generally low penalties. In Michigan, a man who was using a cafe's Wi-Fi signal from his car was ultimately fined $400 and given 40 hours of community service to work off his transgression. (Michigan law allowed for up to a $10,000 fine and five years in prison.) Similar cases have typically resulted in similar sentences, with sub-$1,000 fines and no jail time actually served. But in virtually all of them, the "intruders" are indeed found guilty of some crime in the end.
As a curious side note, Ars Technica notes that the Maryland bill was the brainchild of LeRoy E. Myers, a legislative Delegate who came up with the idea... after a neighbor used his network without permission, because he'd never bothered to set up security for it. His solution was not simply to turn on WPA, but instead to try to write a law to turn his neighbor into a criminal. Epic fail!
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Null, I find this law to be a bit much. There should be little packets included with each router that detail how to secure your router. It only would require a bit of time investment.
I live in Maryland and think that it is useless to have Wi-Fi in cell phones and other devices if it is illegal to piggyback off some one else's network. I personally have a home wi-fi network which in encrypted but sometimes use someone else's network on my iPod touch if I'm away. Its not like im doing something illegal on the network (its usually checking email), so I see no harm in that.
Hey, I "hitchhike" on Internet signals all the time. If they're secured, I can truthfully say that I think and act as if there were no Wi-Fi at all. My router is set up with a WEP password because I don't want anyone getting into mine (and I use my own 99.9% of the time). But if I see an unsecured connection, it might as well be the mall's free Connection Court, where they just took a regular router and didn't set up the security. I have no criminal intent, all of my music is from iTunes or a CD, and unless Google, YouTube, Yahoo, Apple's .Mac, and/or JOYNIC (free ._ _.tt domains) are illegal, I can't say that I use the internet to commit crimes. And jail for using someone else's internet connection... does anyone else agree that this is way over the top? And if there is to be a fine, I really don't think it's worth charging more than $50, tops. Honestly, I don't think there *should* be a fine. Now, if someone were to break into a secured internet connection, that's a whole different story, it's called hacking, which should be a crime, considering the possibility that the hacked network belongs to a business or a bank, that sort of place. Really, it should be a crime even if it's only a secured home network...
Depends on if the person is allowing open access or not - like the FON network - you install a FON router and everyone is freely able to use it for public WiFi access....
A point often missed is that the airwaves so to speak are public property . If you wish to use them in an open fashion then someone happening by is welcome to them . I liken it to a porch light , a person walking by gets to use the light , you can shield it turn it off etc , but that's your job . I wish they would have counter sued !!
i have a wireless system. i don't care if someone else uses it. if i gave a darn, it would be secure! people need to quit being so paranoid.
I think it is crazy to lock anyone up just because they are using a wifi signal that is out on the air waves. that means when you listen to a radio station that is owned by a station u also should be loked up. makes no since this particular law.
If someone wants to have a free internet connection- stop by my house. I have an access point all setup for you- but I also run Snort on that wireless segment. Is that considered illegal?
I can add nothing to what everyone else has said except, I don't know where my free Wi-Fi is coming from. I'm hoping it's a public place like the local library or one of those places who doesn't mind you using their wireless. Our local McDonald's advertises Wi-Fi right in their window, so how do I know that is not the one that I am hooked into right now. So like everyone else, if it's an unsecured router, what crime am I commiting?
If my neighbor%
What you all fail to get here is that everyone will soon have a court record. It will be one way to control the masses.
This to me is a prime example of what we have become as a country.We will sue for anything no matter how simple it is while all along you can take a life a get less time in jail for it.some where we lost what our maine gole should be to put away the criminals and clear our courts of all the nonsince.Our congress will spend millions on cases such as this while oil prices are takeing food of the plates of children when will we stop and relize we have lost the right to be free.
It's amazing how many people think it should be legal to use someone else's internet. If you decided to leave your doors unlocked while shopping, came in and noticed that someone was sitting on your couch watching your TV.... nothing else..... would you consider that a crime? I mean, the door was unlocked, right? Since you didn't lock it, anyone should just be able to come in and do what they want. Have some morals, people. Please!
Stealing is stealing. Hacking into a password protected network cannot be argued in court but the open networks can IMO. I do use open networks when they're around and I want to check something but I wouldn't use it as my main source of connectivity. I have mixed feelings I guess. On one hand I do see it as throwing an apple core in someone else%
trash. If you have a router then it should be your responsibility to secure it. You wouldn't leave your keys in your car door and not have a fear of it being stolen. Insurance companies would say that you assisted in the theft.
I wonder what other cooney laws they plan to pass in the near future. And in any event, if the person has an unsecured signal, they probable have it like that to share anyway. If they did not want people to use their signal, they would password it. Now if users cracked the password, we are involved in a completly different situation.
Actually kb7qdi, that would be a crime. It's called tresspassing. Tresspassing is when you enter someone's property without being invited or allowed. Just because a door is unlocked doesnt mean an invitation was extended or permission granted. Was the guy who stole the radio out of my car just because I accidentally left my door unlocked innocent? No.
This is just like free give-aways at stores and other places that have them. It is also like the booths and other set-up that have samples for people to take. They don't warrent that as stealing. An unsecrued WiFi signal is an invetation for free internet access. They just don't put up a sign or make the information public, all you see is a wirless network with no lock icon beside it.
Well, here's a link to a bunch of laws that pretty much dictate that it is against the law to piggyback or tap into somebody else's computer network (i.e., their wireless connection) - http://www.ncsl.org/programs/lis/CIP/hacklaw.htm Now, is it the type of crime that we need to send people to jail for and tie up our legal system...probably not, depending on what the offender is using the network for. And yes, I agree 100% that a person should secure their wireless network. Just like they should lock their doors, and put locks on their utility sheds, and so on and so forth. But if they don't, it doesn't make their system free game to the public. The arguement that somebody didn't put a lock on their wireless so it should be free is almost as bad as somebody stealing everything from a house because they saw a Craigslist ad that said it was OK. Oh wait, there are people out there that think that's OK too.
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6 Posted by vixengal on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:36PM EDT Report Abuse
If someone is transmitting electromagnetic radiation (a wifi signal) into my home, or a public place, and though my body. I believe I have the natural right to do anything I like with it. On the other hand, If I'm transmitting a signal, it's my responsibility to limit the power to no more than is needed, and to use security for my own protection