Source: http://www.technologyreview.com/Wire/18570/

Monday, April 23, 2007
Bucking convention, Time Warner Cable lets customers set up cheap Wi-Fi 
hotspots
By Associated Press
SEATTLE (AP) -- In a big win for a little Wi-Fi startup called Fon, Time 
Warner Cable Inc. will let its home broadband customers turn their 
connections into public wireless hotspots, a practice shunned by most U.S. 
Internet service providers.

For Fon, which has forged similar agreements with ISPs across Europe, the 
deal will boost its credibility with U.S. consumers. For Time Warner 
Cable, which has 6.6 million broadband subscribers, the move could help 
protect the company from an exodus as free or cheap municipal wireless 
becomes more readily available.

Fon was founded in Spain in 1995 on the premise that people should not 
have to pay twice -- once at home, then again in a coffee shop -- for 
Internet access. At first, the company offered software that let members, 
called Foneros, turn Wi-Fi routers into shared access points, but it took 
hours to get up and running.

In the fall of 2006, Fon, which counts Google Inc. and eBay Inc.'s Skype 
among its investors, started selling and sometimes giving away its own 
branded wireless router, called La Fonera. Since then, it has distributed 
about 370,000 of them worldwide.

La Fonera splits a Wi-Fi connection in two: an encrypted channel for the 
Fonero and a public one for neighbors or passers-by. Foneros can decide 
how much of their bandwidth to share with the public and can log on to any 
Fon router without charge. ''Aliens,'' as Fon calls nonmembers, can 
register on a Web page and pay a modest $2 (euro1.47) or $3 (euro2.20) for 
24 hours of access.

In the U.S., where it costs $10 (euro7.35) for a day pass to use a 
T-Mobile HotSpot at a Starbucks, Fon's economics seem particularly 
appealing.

Joanna Rees, chief executive of Fon USA, said such rates at coffee shops, 
airports and hotels might work for a business person with an expense 
account but are too high for people who just want to quickly check e-mail, 
make a call on a Wi-Fi phone or play on a wireless video game device.

''They're extorting people,'' Rees said.

Starbucks Corp. and T-Mobile USA Inc. representatives responded that they 
provide a premium service, and that customers see value in paying for 
speed, security and reliability.

Fon has about 60,000 Foneros in the U.S. In February, the company launched 
''Fonbucks,'' a one-month router giveaway aimed at people who live above 
or next-door to a Starbucks. It was an amusing way to get more La Foneras 
into high-density areas, and it worked to the tune of 6,800 free routers.

But until now, ISPs in the U.S. have resisted the Fon model. Most big 
companies' end-user license agreements prohibit subscribers from sharing 
their connection outside the home or business. Verizon Communications 
Inc., for example, can terminate contracts if it finds an ad-hoc hotspot.

Those policies are antiquated and don't mesh with the reality of untold 
thousands of people using their neighbors' unsecured Wi-Fi connections, 
Rees argues.

''It's a dirty secret how much leeching'' goes on, Rees said. She said 
ISPs should embrace Fon because the routers, which require that ''aliens'' 
enter a valid credit card number before getting online, put a sharp stop 
to the leeching. And getting free access to the worldwide network of La 
Fonera routers encourages people to get or keep a broadband connection at 
home.

In the Time Warner deal expected to be announced Monday, Fon and the cable 
company will split what ''aliens'' pay to use the hotspots. Rees said the 
two companies are still working out details on how the partnership will be 
marketed. Time Warner Cable spokeswoman Maureen Huff confirmed the broad 
outlines of the deal but declined to discuss any details.

Time Warner may be looking ahead to the not-so-distant future when some of 
the 300 or so municipal wireless projects -- featuring free or at least 
inexpensive broadband -- being considered today become reality.

Godfrey Chua of the research group IDC said the threat is most serious to 
ISPs that still offer dial-up access, because budget-minded customers who 
don't need a fast home connection might be swayed by the access-everywhere 
advantage of municipal Wi-Fi.

Still, that doesn't mean ISPs should start knocking down Fon's door, Chua 
said. After all, it's unclear whether a revenue-sharing agreement with Fon 
would offset the added costs of supporting all the additional traffic that 
Wi-Fi users would bring to a broadband network.

So while Fon's value grows as the number of Foneros increases, so does the 
burden on the ISPs. Chua compares Fon's situation to two popular Internet 
phone providers, Skype and Vonage Holdings Corp.

''Both of those folks so far have been allowed to do what they're doing 
because the traffic loads created haven't been so onerous for the service 
providers,'' Chua said. ''As soon as that becomes a pain point for the 
ISPs, they're going to clamp down on it.''





_______________________________________________
SoCalFreeNet.org General Discussion List
To unsubscribe, please visit: 
http://socalfreenet.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss_socalfreenet.org

Reply via email to