IS NEIGHBOR'S WI-FI SIGNAL FREE FOR ME TO USE?
QUESTION:
The other day, my Internet service went down as it does from time to
time. But this particular time, I needed to check my email for an
important reply I was expecting. After some frustrating time passed,
I happened to notice that there was a Wi-Fi signal available. I have
no idea to whom the service belonged but I suspected it belonged to
one of my neighbors. It had a generic name of "NETGEAR" and it was
unlocked. I decided to see if it was accessible and it was. I was
able to check my email and download the important document that was
attached to it. Now my question to you is if I did anything wrong by
using my neighbor's unlocked Wi-Fi signal to get my email and do a
little web surfing afterward.
ANSWER:
If you want the direct and simple answer, it's illegal to use your
neighbor's Internet service without their consent, period. Your
neighbor is paying for the service and if you are using it without
their knowledge, it's stealing.
Now you will find a wide range of arguments and reasons that will
try and justify/rationalize your using your neighbor's service. Here
are a couple:
"The average person will not know you are using their Internet
service when you access it via an unlocked Wi-Fi signal." That's
pretty much true. The only way they might suspect something is wrong
is if you begin doing something that eats into their bandwidth such
as downloading a large file or begin streaming audio or video. That
will cause their access to become sluggish which they may notice.
Then again if your neighbor subscribes to a large amount of
bandwidth via a DSL or cable modem, your downloading usage may still
go unnoticed. And even if they do notice it, they may just chalk it
up to how flaky the Internet can be from time to time and choose not
to do anything about it.
"Your neighbors are just asking for it because they didn't take the
time to protect their Wi-Fi signal by using encryption." If you go
down that path, the argument continues by saying if they are using
the more easily broken 64-bit WEP protection, they deserve to have
their signal taken. Using that same logic, then it's OK to enter
into your neighbor's home if they don't bother to lock their front
door or lock it using an inferior lock? I think not. Just because
something is there doesn't necessarily mean you have a legal right
to take it.
There's something else you need to consider before you decide to use
that Wi-Fi connection. It could be a trap. There's a way to steal
information by setting up seemingly open Wi-Fi connections. These
Wi-Fi traps are better known as "Honey Pots." The unsuspecting
person is lured into using the seemingly free, unlocked Wi-Fi
service. They access their banking websites, make credit card
purchases, etc. With a Honey Pot, every single thing you type is
being recorded by those who want to steal from you. Your account
information, passwords and anything else you type to gain access has
now become compromised. So that free Internet access you thought you
were getting actually comes with a very heavy price.
Now chances are the Wi-Fi signal you stumbled upon from your home
isn't a Honey Pot. Those are typically set up in public places like
airports, restaurants and other venues where the thieves have access
to literally hundreds of computers every day. Your situation is
probably just some neighbor who didn't know enough to protect their
Internet service. Chances are they may never know you're using their
service and your using it probably won't even cost them anything
unless they are using one of those tiered services that charge extra
if they go over a certain amount of usage. But whether they notice
it or not, or whether it's locked or unlocked really isn't the
point. The bottom line is that unless you have their permission,
you're taking something that doesn't belong to you. That's stealing.
Don't do it.
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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