muffin said:HAHA.... I know... nothing makes a girl hotter HAHAHAHA
Snafu-Bar said:Piggybacking someones "open" wireless isn't commiting a crime as far as i know, it's called hotspotting. Anyone who owns a wireless a router can choose to run it open or locked. Internet cafe's and many other places are running a wireless hotspot providing people in range free i-net. If someone is running thier router wide open then it's thier own fault.
Or it could be someone who knows what they are doing and they're sniffing the freeloader's traffic for interesting stuff like user names, passwords, account numbers, personal info......using free i-net open to public access due to owner malfunction and lack of password is called a freebie.
garb811 said:Justify it however you want, it's still Theft of Telecommunications and a Criminal Offence. If you found a wallet that had a bank card and PIN number in it, would it be ok to use the card to take money out of the owner's account?? After all, it was buddies fault because he not only lost his wallet but he was dumb enough to have his PIN in there too.
Or it could be someone who knows what they are doing and they're sniffing the freeloader's traffic for interesting stuff like user names, passwords, account numbers, personal info...
I don't know what your background is, but I'm pretty sure it isn't in the legal profession or law enforcement given your shaky understanding of the legality of what is being discussed so it might be wise not to be dispensing erroneous advice.
Snafu-Bar said:Justification on making use of ineternet access via free wireless is hardly "criminal". Like i already said HACKING the box or the host(the router or host computer) to gain that access would BE the cime. Making use of the free "access" is just making use of what the owner made availble aware or unaware. Ala "internet cafe hotspotting"
I'm not advocating anything nor am i advising anyone. i'm merely pointing out the "grey" area that people still have with regards to gaining free access via wireless wavelengths and lack of passswords and secure router setups that the OWNER is responsible for.
Cheers.
A private individual failing to secure his WAP does not give you the legal right to piggyback upon that means for your own purposes without his permission anymore than someone failing to put up a fence around his yard gives you the legal right to use their real property for your own purposes without his permission. The only reason it is a "grey" area is because there are people like you out there who think they know what they are talking about from a legal standpoint when they don't.Snafu-Bar said:Justification on making use of ineternet access via free wireless is hardly "criminal". Like i already said HACKING the box or the host(the router or host computer) to gain that access would BE the cime. Making use of the free "access" is just making use of what the owner made availble aware or unaware. Ala "internet cafe hotspotting"
I'm not advocating anything nor am i advising anyone. i'm merely pointing out the "grey" area that people still have with regards to gaining free access via wireless wavelengths and lack of passswords and secure router setups that the OWNER is responsible for.
Cheers.
Michael O`Leary said:An internet cafe establishes a hot spot for the purpose of providing an open network. Your neighbour hasn't. Using that signal unauthorized is stealing his bandwidth, which he is paying for for his own use. Your comparison to a cafe hotspot is not a valid comparison.
Would you wash your car with a random stanger's hose outlet simply because he didn't shut off the water, so it must be free for your use too?
Snafu-Bar said:Anyone who buys a wireless router has the same options given to them as an Internet cafe, they also have the same protocols and software setups that "enable or disable" freeloaders from gaining access to that bandwidth. They also have the same user manuals and setup instructions mebbe even the same online tech support to hammer home the point. If the owner of that router is unable to setup or acknowledge the implications of having and owning that router then why should the people using that bandwidth be considered the bad party in this?
If the access is being used as intended without malicious intent to anyone and not breaking any laws then it's pretty much a lottery draw for bandwidth. The routher is NOT being compromised in any way nor is the host or any data on it. Free access does not mean the person making use of it are using it for malicious intent.
Speculate all you want but the fact is the HOST has something broadcasting "freely to the public" and the public is now able to use this freely. Blame not the public, blame the appropriate party.
Cheers.
garb811 said:The only person speculating here is you. You have no idea what you are talking about from a legal standpoint and it is quite obvious you do not want to understand the issues. At this point I'm starting to think you're so firm in your belief that this isn't Theft of Telecommunications is because you are actively engaged in that act.
I work in law enforcement daily. It is my job to research and interpret the appropriate legislation in order to determine on reasonable and probable grounds whether or not the elements ofr an offence have been met. It is also my job to keep abreast of case law which impacts upon said legislation. If Quag were to become the subject of an investigation, he would be facing charges. Full stop, end of discussion.
Bruce Monkhouse said:Snafu-Bar,......it is illegal and its not a "grey" area.
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Bruce
Milnet.ca Staff
Niteshade said:The requirement is on the router user to obtain permission to use the router.
Not on the owner of the router to DISALLOW permission first.
E.R. Campbell said:There are many provisions in all manner of laws and regulations, including the Criminal Code, that are outdated or ill conceived and unenforceable.
The Radiocommunication Act regulates all use of the RF spectrum. It sidesteps interception because some radio signals (the broadcast band, for example) are intended to be intercepted. Others are not, but the Act requires those who do not intend their signals to be intercepted to encode – not the same as encrypt - them. Encoding, for the moment, can be as simple as digitizing – but that may change; my guess is that it will change, sooner rather than later.
The arrival of ‘pay’ broadcast services complicated the issue. The Industry Department reacted by making it illegal to decode signals in Canada that are not authorized in Canada – thus one commits an offence by buying a so called grey market service and decoder box in the USA and then receiving/viewing a US satellite service in Canada.
The problem is getting more complex as technology makes new encoding and interception techniques available. Thus, while (a few years ago) Industry Canada forbade selling scanners that could ‘decode’ digital signals – thus ‘protecting’ some important public safety services and all new generation cellular (PCS) services – they did not make it illegal to build and use a digital scanner. The law, therefore, failed to address the real problem: city, provincial and the national government are too cheap to encrypt their radios, they want the law to ‘protect’ them. It ‘punished’ a hobby community even as it shied away from calling criminals to account for using technology to support their crimes. That regulation will have to be changed – as soon as governments wake up to heir responsibilities.
One of the reasons, I believe that we have seen so few enforcement actions, much less prosecutions, on things like piggybacking on a radio signal or digital scanning, is that very, very few lawyers, including very few Crown Prosecutors are confident that a case can be made, in law.
I think Snafu-Bar is closer to the truth than is garb811. The ‘law’ may be there, in the Criminal Code, but it may not be a useful, enforceable law. A law the Crown will not enforce is in a grey area.
It is recommended to enable encryption on your wireless router before your wireless network adapters
Bruce Monkhouse said:Edward, next time I visit just leave the liquor cabinet open and we can philosophise about the 'grey' area of leaving the sweet nectar unlocked, so therefore.....
Bruce Monkhouse said:...
Its theft,...the unauthorized use of someone else's bandwidth without their permission.
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