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View Full Version : Damn you Florida (police)



verve247
07-06-2005, 07:05 PM
Looks like it is going to be illegal to use your neighbor's unsecure wireless network. You may just get slapped with a 3rd degree felony.

link (http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050707/ap_on_hi_te/techbits_wi_fi_theft_1)

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Police have arrested a man for using someone else's wireless Internet network in one of the first criminal cases involving this fairly common practice.
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Benjamin Smith III, 41, faces a pretrial hearing this month following his April arrest on charges of unauthorized access to a computer network, a third-degree felony.

Police say Smith admitted using the Wi-Fi signal from the home of Richard Dinon, who had noticed Smith sitting in an SUV outside Dinon's house using a laptop computer.

The practice is so new that the Florida Department of Law Enforcement doesn't even keep statistics, according to the St. Petersburg Times, which reported Smith's arrest this week.

Innocuous use of other people's unsecured Wi-Fi networks is common, though experts say that plenty of illegal use also goes undetected: such as people sneaking on others' networks to traffic in child pornography, steal credit card information and send death threats.

Security experts say people can prevent such access by turning on encryption or requiring passwords, but few bother or are unsure how to do so.

Wi-Fi, short for Wireless Fidelity, has enjoyed prolific growth since 2000. Millions of households have set up wireless home networks that give people like Dinon the ability to use the Web from their backyards but also reach the house next door or down the street.

It's not clear why Smith was using Dinon's network. Prosecutors declined to comment, and a working phone number could not be located for Smith.

krayzie1
07-06-2005, 10:16 PM
War driving!!!!! Always fun to do!!!

http://www.wardriving.com/

bachviet
07-06-2005, 10:17 PM
This is really dumb. :disa: Hopefully CA doesn't follow FL weirdness law.

PrObLy
07-06-2005, 11:11 PM
This is absolutely ridiculous. Most networking cards and laptops are configured to automatically connect to the first and strongest network signal it can find unless you have a discrete profile saved. This guy's network had NO protection enabled on it, so when his laptop's wireless card found the signal, the router quite literally invited him onto the network by providing him with an IP address.

I understand that this guy was dilberately using the signal, but, so many people do this by mistake all of the time.

When I left my apartment for a few weeks one of my roommates ended up resetting the router to default settings and when I came back there were TEN computers/laptops/handhelds that didn't belong to us connected to our network, including five from the businesses located below us.

While I was at the University of Illinois several weeks ago celebrating my friend's birthday I set up his wireless network and there was over a dozen wireless networks in range, with only 3 or 4 having any type of encryption enabled.

SecretIkon
07-06-2005, 11:31 PM
can't blame the users that have wireless connections on there computer....people who have a wireless network should have encryption enabled. or else someone can easily snatch their line and use it.

i have my wireless network encryption enabled.

krayzie1
07-07-2005, 07:45 AM
I agree. On my network I only allow in the NIC cards that I tell it that are good.

Thats like leaving your car running on the side of the road then being mad when someone steals it.

chrissy
07-07-2005, 08:20 AM
We have that issue to.

When I log on, I constantly get a message saying I have more than one wireless connection available. At the most I have seen 8. I want to take out an ad in the paper with the names of the networks (usually their last names) and ask if they don't mind if I mooch off of them. I have also been tempted to go to their houses. Base housing tends to have last names on the houses.


(I have also thought about sending a print job to their printers, but the good girl in me stops me)

verve247
07-07-2005, 08:53 AM
Think they'll try him for being a computer hax0r terrorist? Or maybe the police will consult their local IT guy and he will inform them that they are a bunch of idiots.

raimin
07-07-2005, 09:25 AM
i leave my wifi open to those who want to use the internet. i have mac filtering to those who can browse the network, and those who only has internet. I know people can get around that, but mebbe i'm being too trusting and naive :wavey2:

Markel
07-07-2005, 10:01 AM
(I have also thought about sending a print job to their printers, but the good girl in me stops me)
The New York Times, home delivery! :heh:

ShawnLee
07-07-2005, 02:33 PM
How retarded. I read about this being technically illegal before, but there's a good argument to say that the guy who got arrested wasn't intentionally on someone else's network. The guy was broadcasting his SSID and keeping it open, one could argue that that's an informal invitation for users.