Nuh uh. Open hotspots is one of the great things about the internet, and
from time to time everyone needs one - sometimes in the middle of the
night or during holidays when lobbies with keys posted aren't available.
Open hotspots are also a good way to maintain anonymity for dissidents,
whistle-blowers, LGBT who are not "out", etc. When I have my own
routers, I often run them open for all these reasons, and I always will.
I sometimes educate family and friends about PGP, and one of these days
I will run a Tor node as well, with all the censor-circumvention tools
available. The more that censors and anti-anonymity Orwellianists don't
like it, the more everybody should do it.
I don't give .001% of a damn whether actual criminals use hotspots or
anything else, in exactly the same ways I don't give .001% of a damn if
they use guns, cars, roads, kitchen knives - or anything else.
Instead of desiring safety over the animating quest for freedom, why
don't you suggest educating people to use https? As it is, the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (
www.eff.org) recently reported that
https use is up to 40%, IIRC.
- Vara
On 3/20/2017 12:29 PM, Victor Odhner wrote:
> I’m really annoyed that so many companies offer open WIFI when it
> would be so easy to secure those hot spots.
>
> Restaurants, hotels, and the waiting rooms of auto dealerships are
> almost 100% open.
>
> I am not one to say “there ought to be a law” because we have too many
> doggone laws, and I’m not that into a lot of demonstrating and
> yelling. But I would love to help educate companies on why they should
> secure their routers.
>
> If I were a progressive type, I’d suggest putting stickers on those
> venues saying:
>
> We don’t have passwords on our WIFI
> because OUR WIFI (and YOUR passwords)
> should be available to everybody
> with no effort!
>
> But being more right-wing, I’d much rather recognize that they’d be
> happy to do the right thing if we could explain it to the right people.
>
> I’ve repeatedly thanked the mechanic shop I use (C&R Tire on Tatum)
> because they have a key posted and I can feel sort of safe going
> online while I wait for an oil change. But all the places that have
> open routers are corporate owned so it does no good to gripe to the
> folks behind the desk.
>
> Any ideas on this?
>
> Thanks,
> Victor
>
>
>
>
>
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