http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/2881

WISP Wannabe Sells Wi-Fi Snakeoil
Rob Flickenger
Mar. 06, 2003 03:16 PM

Imagine my surprise when I found this "press release" floating around the
Net this morning:

"Seattle Wireless, a Social Wireless Area Network (SWAN) platform
provider, announced the expansion of its services to the 12 largest
metropolitan cities across North America, making the Wi-Fi technology
company the nation's largest Wi-Fi provider."

Gee, that's funny. I'm involved with SeattleWireless.net, and that's the
first I've heard of it. Odd that Matt Westervelt and Ken Caruso (the
founders of seattlewireless.net) didn't say anything about a press
release. You would think they would have said something, considering that
I just accompanied them to the third FreeNetworks community network summit
in San Francisco.

Ah, there's the confusion. It's seattlewireless.COM up to its old
shenanigans again. If you haven't heard the saga, it's easily summed up by
consulting the Internet Archive for both seattlewireless.net and
seattlewireless.com (which appeared a full two years AFTER the
seattlewireless.net project started.) Since the .com appeared on the
scene, it has gradually included more and more pieces from various other
free network projects (including the Einstein Quote from nocat.net's front
page, and even something nebulous called their "Personal Telco" platform
(directly taking the name of PersonalTelco, Portland's major community
wireless network.)

Up until today, seattlewireless.com has been little more than an annoyance
to actual community networking projects. But several important lines have
now been crossed:

Various node lists and maps from projects including NYC Wireless,
PersonalTelco, and of course, SeattleWireless.NET, are listed as
seattlewireless.COM nodes.  They are now taking money for the privilege of
accessing these nodes, none of which are supported by their
"organization". Interestingly enough, their credit card entry page doesn't
even use SSL.  The "company" is now making wild claims about what its
technology can do. Here's a choice quote:  "Our telecommunications
industry platforms, the Telecom Platform, the Village Telephony Platform
and the Personal Telco Platform, allow roaming between different networks
and across standards such as 802.11, Bluetooth, HiperLan, TDMA, CDMA, and
3G cellular networks. We partner with carriers, CLECs, ILECs, and telecom
companies to license these Wi-Fi platform networks while supplying tools,
content, services, branded bandwidth, and portals." Finally. I've always
wanted to roam from my Bluetooth directly to CDMA. Now that's a feature.

In short, don't be fooled. If you're interested in community wireless
networking in Seattle, go to seattlewireless.NET. At the risk of stating
the tragically obvious, know who you're dealing with before you give
anyone your credit card number online. SeattleWireless.NET will never ask
you for a credit card.

We build Free Networks.

Rob Flickenger is the author of two O'Reilly books: Building Wireless
Community Networks and Linux Server Hacks.




Frank Keeney

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