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2008-05-01
, 08:27
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Posts: 477 |
Thanked: 118 times |
Joined on Dec 2005
@ Munich, Germany
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#22
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2008-05-01
, 16:55
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Posts: 481 |
Thanked: 190 times |
Joined on Feb 2006
@ Salem, OR
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#23
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2008-05-01
, 17:12
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Posts: 4,930 |
Thanked: 2,272 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#24
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This device is way overkill. You don't need a full router at all for the tablets, and USB wifi stick with an antenna connection is a far better choice.
The choice of antenna is also particularly stupid. Not only does it make very difficult to find networks (high gain antennas get their high gain because they receive from a smaller angle, so that this antenna will be difficult to point at an unknown signal), but there are antennas designs with similar gain which are far less conspicuous. A simple waveguide or microstrip sector antenna would be a much, much better choice, for example.
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2008-05-01
, 17:43
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Posts: 772 |
Thanked: 183 times |
Joined on Jul 2005
@ Montclair, NJ (NYC suburbs)
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#25
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I believe the manufacturer should set the security on by default and write on the manual a unique password
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2008-05-01
, 18:13
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Moderator |
Posts: 7,109 |
Thanked: 8,820 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Vancouver, BC, Canada
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#26
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2008-05-01
, 18:20
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Posts: 220 |
Thanked: 19 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#27
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2008-05-01
, 18:39
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Posts: 4,930 |
Thanked: 2,272 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#28
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2008-05-01
, 18:47
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Posts: 11,700 |
Thanked: 10,045 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
@ North Texas, USA
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#29
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It SHOULD be free if you ask me. For example, I should be allowed to unprotect my router and let any of my neighbors use it without having to personally go out and let each one know it is ok. But the law has regarded anyone using an unprotected wireless router as stealing bandwidth.
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2008-05-01
, 20:06
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Posts: 220 |
Thanked: 19 times |
Joined on Jun 2006
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#30
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- I didn't make any assertions about them. A simple assertion that "the law has regarded" anything, without any reference to what law, is at least useless, and arguably worse. That was my principal point in that post.
- I also claimed not to know of any cases directly applicable to your example. (I know of no such cases; I am somewhat cognizant of a variety of cases that have gotten some publicity, but the ones I have heard of typically involved an AP operated by a commercial or government entity.)
- Oh, and I threw in a humorous jab at the DMCA, which seems to make more or less any activity involving a computer possibly illegal, at the relevant court's discretion, but is not directly related.
So what gave you the idea that I "understand the legal principles very well"?FWIW, you seem to be confusing things a little; either forbid the sheep, or forbid the neighbor from letting wireless communications onto your property; the latter may actually be within your rights, if his communications are causing interference.
Really though, I suspect* the difference has less to do with radio waves vs. sheep or forbiddability than with the two-way nature of the communication; you interrogate the neighbors router, eliciting responses it would not otherwise have produced. I expect** simply packet sniffing traffic without any transmission is not considered illegal in as many jurisdictions as actively connecting to an AP and downloading your own data.
*Disclaimer: suspect in this context is used merely to introduce a supposition which seems likely, and is not intended as and should not be interpreted or construed as a suggestion of competency, legal-principle-understanding, paralegal status, or bar licensure in any state, province, nation, region or planet.
**Disclaimer: expect in this context is used merely to introduce an inference, and is not intended as and should not be interpreted or construed as a suggestion of competency, legal-principle-understanding, paralegal status, or bar licensure in any state, province, nation, region or planet.