Metropolitan Wireless Internet

Metropolitan Wireless Internet Access

The Promise For years, wires have been the bane of my domestic existence. As an electronic musician and a techie, I have had wires of every variety snaking throughout my home, getting underfoot and causing no end of head scratching determining which of them is at fault in any given communications failure. Wires were, and to a certain extent remain, a necessary evil. It should be viewed as no surprise therefore, that I was among the first to jump on the wireless networking bandwagon. I felt truly emancipated! To finally be rid of unsightly cables running under carpets and unavoidably across sections of bare floor seemed like the best gift I could ever have received from the gods of tech.

For a long time, my home was a virtual oasis in a desert of wireless networking traffic… then my neighbors got religion. Now on any given day, I can see no less than 10 other wireless routers in my area all crowded into the same narrow spectrum, vying for their own piece of the 802.11 pie. With this burgeoning adoption of high speed Internet connectivity and WiFi, corporations and municipalities alike began to take notice. Why not deliver Internet services directly from the ISP to the home in a manner which transcends the bonds of wired infrastructure?

The first city in the world to deploy wireless Internet access in such a manner was Zamora, Spain, followed closely by Grand Haven, Michigan of the United States. In Canada, Fredericton, New Brunswick bears the distinction of being the first to move towards total coverage of their city, a project which is to be completed by the end of this year. Best of all, Fredericton’s access is provided to its constituents by the municipality for free.

“So what?”, you might think. “I get my Internet access through my local cable company – what do I care if it’s initially wireless or not if I can enable that functionality myself within the confines of my home?” The implications of metropolitan wide wireless Internet access however, though not apparent at first blush, are far reaching indeed. Having this persistent connection at our immediate disposal empowers the populace and negatively impacts the influence of major corporations and regulators alike. Media conglomerates are reduced in significance, telcos and cable companies are threatened (including their cellular divisions), content access laws such as Canada’s Broadcasting Act are ignored… and this is just the tip of the iceberg. For example, will I tune into my local radio station to listen to whatever fare they decide to deliver me that day, or will I instead select from among the thousands of specialized Internet based channels which cater directly to the type of information or entertainment I am interested in? Will I simply trust what my news commentators tell me on my local television station as gospel, or will I decide for myself what to believe based on aggregated news reports of differing perspective collected from throughout the globe? In fact, will I even bother sitting down to watch them rehash what I already know according to their schedule? Am I going to pay for a long distance call at home or am I going to use Voice over IP from wherever I happen to be? Will I be forced to pay for my Internet access from one of two sources (cable or DSL) or will my options be significantly more varied?

The Problems To me, this all sounds great; however, the de facto monopolies in their respective areas will certainly not be going quietly into the night. In fact, industry backed bills restricting municipalities from providing Internet access are being tabled all over the United States. In Texas, bill HB 789 would impose one of the most draconian set of regulations governing municipal involvement in communications by stating “A municipality or municipally owned utility may not, directly or indirectly, on its own or with another entity, offer to the public a service as a network provider; or any telecommunications or network service, without regard to the technology platform used to provide the service.” This in effect even restricts local governments from providing free Internet access within schools and libraries! The fight concerning stewardship over Internet access has just begun and we should definitely be paying attention to our southern neighbors in order to ensure reasonable solutions are applied here in Canada.

Finally, there are huge security concerns in moving to a wireless only network. Commonly available security measures such as WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) in wireless routers provide laughable levels of protection – and that’s assuming people even enable it! In my experience locally, the vast majority of users don’t bother. Truth be told, given how easy WEP is to crack, they might be considered almost justified in their reluctance to complicate their home setups. By way of example, at a recent security conference in Los Angeles, a group of FBI computer cops cracked a 128 bit WEP encrypted network in under 3 minutes. A less sophisticated cracker might take a little longer… but he has all day – it’s not like he has to break into your house to do it! Other common encryption schemes such as WPA, though superior, are still quite vulnerable.

The Portents What does the near future hold for metropolitan wireless Internet access?

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