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Thread: What is the law where you live?

  1. #1
    Admiral renovation's Avatar
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    Question What is the law where you live?

    I'm curious...you turn on your computer, cell phone, tablet, what ever, and you find a fairly strong, usable, Wi-Fi signal, coming from your next door neighbor. This signal is not secure.

    You connect, and realize that you could cancel your ISP service, and use your neighbor's for free. That would save you a lot of money every month that the free ride continued.

    I was surprised to learn that this "signal mooching", as it's called, is not illegal in many states. In Florida, where I'm at a lot it is a simple misdemeanor. In many areas the laws are completely undefined. Many states feel that you have a right to use any signal that enters your home, and it's incumbent on the person radiating the signal to secure it if he/she doesn't want someone else using it.
    I need to check about Michigan .

    What is the law where you live?


    I'm know when I'm traveling i just hop on what ever open signal I fine. it is funny how many people have left there computers open to be hacked. I'm not going to say I haven't looked around a couple that I've used there wi-fi before . never found anything interesting do.
    now what I have done in the past. when at a friends house and I have my laptop . tried to get into there system when in there driveway . you be surprised like they were to fine out there's were wide open. a lot of people think just because there using a wireless router there secure.
    You could pick up Lindsay Lohan for less than a intel 990x, and still have money left over to bail her outta jail

  2. #2
    If one was to interpret FCC regulations for today's equipment, then that's what you would get...if its open, then its use is not illegal.

    And thats how I think it should be.
    Am I alone here? Is that it?
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  3. #3
    Admiral Napoleon54's Avatar
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    Lots of people like the idea of leaving it open for others to use. If it ain't locked, it's fair to assume that's the intent.
    There is all the difference in the world between treating people equally and attempting to make them equal. - Friedrich Hayek

  4. #4
    Vice Admiral gwilks98's Avatar
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    Um...I'm not a lawyer, but I know a man was convicted in Florida for jumping on an open wireless connection without permission. And it was a coffee shop or similar with wifi meant for customers...not a residence.

    Laws are open to interpretation, but I would not want to put myself in the situation where my fate was decided by a judge who may or may not fully understand IT laws. While you may have a case, assumptions in the legal world are flat our dangerous.

    http://oneminutenews.com/channel/tec...net-is-illegal

    http://www.dba-oracle.com/t_unauthor...work_crime.htm



    Nevermind the possibility that the "open" network is really just a trap from a would-be hacker looking for targets to connect to his network.

    My suggestion is stay off open wifi that isn't meant for you.
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