[iDC] Wifi-Hog and Situated Tech in the City
Jonah Brucker-Cohen
jonah at coin-operated.com
Wed Jul 19 12:10:01 EDT 2006
Hi all,
Here is some text I wrote about my "Wifi-Hog" project for my PhD
thesis which specifically addresses situated tech and the city. This
project has gotten a lot of criticism / debate in the past which has
helped to strengthen its focus and lead to other / similar type
interventions / ideas for future research and discussion. Hopefully
it will bring up some interesting discussion on this list as well...
Jonah
WiFi-Hog: From Reaction to Realization
by Jonah Brucker-Cohen
URL: http://www.coin-operated.com/projects/wifihog
When technologies are first introduced, hype usually follows. The
hype naturally dissipates over time, but when news begins to spread
about how people are using the technology, the hype machine begins to
resurface. When I first heard about wireless internet (or 802.11b)
back in early 1999, I ignored it. This was a technology that seemed
very far off, as no computers were yet equipped with wireless
receivers (except a few Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs)). I heard
about people using the technology in classrooms and hospitals, with
very particular applications that seemed too particular for any
mainstream adoption. A couple years went by and my ignoring continued.
A few years later, wireless internet (now affectionately called
"Wi-Fi") began to resurface as reports of projects and public
community networks began to sprout up. Now that Wi-Fi was being
integrated into everything from laptops to portable stereo systems,
my ignoring started to dissipate in the hype. Wireless was becoming
cheap, pervasive, and simple to implement.
After hearing about the hype and projects, I began to notice
something else that was happening in and around wireless nodes and
their deployment. In August 2002, Slashdot ran an article about
"Starbucks vs. Personal Telco Project (PTP)" [1] , a battle that was
quietly taking place in Portland, Oregon's Pioneer Square. This was a
challenge over public obstruction of wireless space, where corporate
signal was out-blasting the pre-existing community signal. PTP had
two 2 T1 connections with off the shelf routers setup providing free
wireless access to anyone in the square. A few months later,
Starbucks who partnered with T-mobile, set up in-store satellite
Internet access that broadcasted on Channel 1 within the store and
around the square. Channel 1 is the default connection found by most
consumer wireless cards. As a result, since Starbuck's signal was
stronger and its connection speed was faster than PTP, the once free
network that pervaded the park had to close down. The struggle over
claiming ownership of public spaces with wireless nodes was in full
swing.
On a trip to the NYC Wireless [2] headquarters in 2002, I heard a
story about how Verizon (a major telecommunications company in NYC)
had started to put high-power wireless access points (APs) on the
tops of all of their pay phone booths in the city. These blanketed
every block of the city and were only available to customers of
Verizon's DSL service. NYC Wireless had set up a free node from their
office which was meant to reach the street below, but Verizon's
corner payphone node was interfering with it. The problem was further
reaching than I thought.
In 2003, I began working on a project called "Wifi-Hog" that was a
direct reaction to the claim of ownership that corporations and
individuals were placing on public wireless space. The project
consisted of a laptop connected to a Portable Video Jammer (PVJ), and
some custom circuitry that communicates to software on computer. The
software was comprised of a packet sniffer (such as Carnivore [7])
and wireless stumbler (such as NetStumbler [4] which allows the
software to find open networks) which monitors incoming packets from
an open node. The idea was to only allow traffic originating from the
Wifi-Hogger's IP address to access network, otherwise the PVJ is
switched on, blocking others from connecting to the open node. Since
most Wi-Fi networks operate on the un-licensed 2.4 GHZ band, jamming
this spectrum is not illegal. There are over 100 websites that
advertise and sell the PVJ, so finding one was relatively easy.
As mobile technology has entered public space and brought private
conversations and interactions along with it, an interesting rift was
forming between what is deemed acceptable usage. Wifi-Hog is
specifically reacting to the lack of an "Acceptable Usage Policy" of
wireless networks. Since these networks exist as private, public, and
corporate monitored services, there is also confusion about rights
ownership over networks in public spaces. Wifi-Hog is a tool that
enables control over a specified network by someone who is not the
network's administrator and looks specifically at what happens when
these seemingly open networks are made exclusive and competitive. In
a sense, Wifi-Hog exists as a tactical media tool for controlling and
subverting this claim of ownership and regulation over free spectrum,
by allowing a means of control to come from a third-party.
As mobile and wireless devices become more ubiquitous, free and
public wireless nodes have gained high penetration. Free nodes are
popping up in public parks, airport terminals, libraries, schools,
and other venues worldwide. In addition to sanctioned spaces for the
nodes, private nodes without encryption are leaking from offices and
houses onto city and rural streets. Activities that exploited and
actively seeked out these networks began to materialize. Some
examples include the WARchalking [3] and WARdriving phenomenon (where
you search for open nodes on city streets and mark their location
with chalk) and artist interventions like "Noderunner" [5] and Blast
Theory's "Can you see me now?" [6] which integrate urban street
players with wireless connectivity. As the networks grew, especially
in dense urban spaces, signals from private, public, and commercial
(or paid) nodes began to interfere with each other. This spectrum
overload brings up even more questions about how jurisdiction of
signal is defined and who has precedence over others.
Looking specifically at free wireless access points, Wifi-Hog is also
a reaction to the public spaces they inhabit. Wifi-Hog is a personal
tool to enable both private interaction in public space as well as
social obstruction and deconstruction of shared resources. This idea
compares to similar situation of property acquisition in the before
state-controlled zoning laws were put in place. Land was a public
resource that had to be regulated due to misuse and territorial
disputes. My aim was to investigate how wireless networks could also
fall into this predicament since they can leak or pervade from
private to public spaces. This containment issue might also allow for
third parties to disrupt or interfere with them.
An interesting example of this type of territorial dispute occurred
the United States in the late 19th century. The Homestead Act of 1862
provided that unoccupied public land be transferred to a homesteader
after five years of residence. This was an act sanctioned by the US
government to create a system of land grants to encourage settlers to
develop the then uninhabited West. In effect, the Homestead Act was a
pay off for settling in the region. The idea behind Wifi-Hog counters
this since it represents an almost "hostile" takeover of this land.
Imagine if you had lived on the land for 3 years, it was still in the
public domain, but you had invested your life into it, and someone
came along and fenced off the land with a barrier you could not
penetrate. In this case you do not have any legal right to the land,
but you still feel as if it is yours since it has been in your
custody for 3 years. This is a scenario closely linked to Wifi-Hog's
premise that a public wireless network maybe be partially owned or
controlled by someone, but it can nevertheless be taken away and
controlled. The project sends a clear message to groups attempting to
claim ownership over a public space by demonstrating that their
network can be easily jammed and controlled by others. An example of
its use might be for an individual to use Wi-Fi Hog to disrupt a
corporate signal and let a weaker, but free node exist in the same
space. This signifies a loss of control by providers and sparks a
challenge to their "land-grabbing" attitudes.
Since the project was introduced, most of the reaction from wireless
communities has been negative. This mostly stems from
misunderstandings of why the project exists and how it was presented.
Most people were upset that I was "advertising" the PVJ as something
that could disrupt all of the progress and work that had been done to
create open networks. My focus at first was to disprove the fact that
wireless was leading us into a "utopian" world where networks would
be everywhere and people would work harmoniously beside each other. I
see this as a simplistic view that fails to see the conflicts of
ownership and the complex integration and use of wireless in public
spaces. Some thought that my project created rifts in the "community
nodes" that existed such as London's Consume.net [8] or NYC
Wireless's wireless parks, since I was promoting a disruptive tool.
From a discussion on the NYC Wireless list, some comments about the
project were made evident by an anonymous poster:
"If I remember the way NYC Wireless, etc started out, the very act of
putting up public wireless nodes was to exert territoriality - we
were claiming the public parks as free Wi-Fi zones, and betting that
these would deter pay providers from locating there. To a large
degree this has turned out to be an accurate prediction. We were also
trying to re-contextualize networks within local places, grounding
them in real urban communities rather than having them exist in some
kind of an abstract non-geographic cyberspace. I have to agree that
this project doesn't seem to be terribly sophisticated, and is very
reactionary. It is a yes/no proposition, without any selectivity. You
might just as well just be climbing atop the maintenance shed in
Bryant Park and plugging / unplugging the antenna lead." (August 2003)
Despite the mixed reactions and confusion surrounding the point of
the project and its execution, the problem it addresses remains
important. As spectrum overcrowding becomes more common in cities,
the conflict between for-pay and free nodes will reach a critical
point. Companies will have to enforce strict delineation of their
signal strength so that free networks cannot impede on their business
models and vise versa. Projects like WiFi-Hog are clear and critical
reminders that wireless networking is still a young technology that
displaces architectural and social boundaries. This distinction is
important for the future of wireless and the communities that support
its development.
Footnotes
1. Slashdot, August 2002
(http://yro.slashdot.org/yro/02/08/20/0431202.shtml?tid=98)
2. NYC Wireless (http://www.nycwireless.org)
3. WARchalking (Wireless Access Router) (http://www.warchalking.org)
4. NetStumbler (http://www.netstumbler.com)
5. Noderunner (http://www.noderunner.com)
6. Blast Theory, "Can You See Me Now?", (http://www.canyouseemenow.co.uk)
7. Carnivore, (http://www.rhizome.org/carnivore).
8. Consume.net (http://www.consume.net)
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