wouldn't this be so much more interesting if people actually were
warchalking. sometimes i think there are more journalists writing about it
than people actually doing it

do we have any evidence that warchalking and warspamming are actually
occuring?

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http://www.pcw.co.uk/News/1135130


Warchalking is theft, says Nokia

By James Middleton [18-09-2002]

Geek 'pioneers' slammed as bandwidth thieves

Warchalking, the technique of highlighting areas where wireless networks can
be accessed freely, has been blasted as theft.
And the practitioners of warchalking are being slammed as bandwidth thieves
in an advisory issued by mobile and wireless vendor Nokia.

Over the last few months, geeks have been drawing chalk symbols on walls and
pavements in cities to mark points where signals from nearby office wireless
networks can be tapped into to access the internet.

The initial hysteria was over security, when it emerged that warchalkers may
also be freely browsing corporate networks and accessing private company
information. Now Nokia has raised the stakes.

"Data privacy is at stake, and so is data integrity," the firm said. "But
the little-talked-about issue of bandwidth-robbing by these warchalkers
should not be ignored.

"While the warchalkers maintain they are not trying to hack networks, they
are using a resource which they haven't paid for."

Sitting outside an office and using a company's wireless network to surf the
web means that the perpetrator has established an IP address and is using
bandwidth - reducing the bandwidth available to the company. "This is
theft - plain and simple," said Nokia.

Another problem that has presented itself in recent weeks is that of
'warspamming'. Simply by logging into an unprotected wireless network and
finding an open simple mail transfer protocol port, spammers can send their
messages to 10 million names while remaining completely anonymous, as well
as avoiding heavy bandwidth costs.

"If the connection is used often enough with data-hungry applications, the
warchalkers could steal enough bandwidth to reduce the performance of the
company's applications, resulting in a poor end-user experience and
potentially even denial of service. For a business, this is unpalatable,"
said Nokia.



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