Hi James,
fine questions.
First, there is no other tenet here, its a private home, my apartment is in the basement, and honestly? I saw more than a few rental unites that advertised as all inclusive, i. e. providing internet as a part of the rent just like some provide utilities.
Speaking personally, I wonder how rogers enforced  that rule?
willing to share the models of those units so I can search for them?



On Thu, 13 Apr 2023, James Knott via talk wrote:

On 2023-04-13 18:13, Karen Lewellen via talk wrote:
 Hi wise souls,
 I hope I ask this question clearly, as it may be hard to picture.
 My new landlord is including Internet in my rent, all the more motivation
 to find a solution.
 he has bell, fibe for home, which includes things like Internet, but is
 not very aware of unique methods of using the Internet, like Ethernet
 connections.
  for the past year I have quite easily used fibe connections with my main
 machine, so I feel sure this may be more about distance than anything
 else.
 There is no physical modem in my apartment.  Instead, I have a set of two
 adapter I got from the source a few years back.
 they plug into the wall, have a single Ethernet  jack, and when the other
 item is connected to the modem  via the same method, I can use the
 network, no extra software involved.
 The problem we are having though is that for unexplained reasons I loose
 internet access, sometimes for minutes, sometimes for several hours at a
 time.
 My first thought was that perhaps the service  upstairs thinks i am a
 threat, but again my new landlord has no idea how to check for this.
 To be forthright the Internet shakiness is becoming a major factor for me
 personally, I still have no land line, doing a great deal of work with
 resources on line, like reach my office email.
 Leading me to the question.
 given adapter  like the one I am using now existed, think 2017 or 2018, I
 am guessing comparative ones exist that allow the Ethernet connection to
 tap into a wireless network.
 By which I mean,  there will be no need for the adapter to be physically
 connected to the service modem, the adapter can draw upon  the wireless
 resources, while still providing say a single Ethernet jack.
 Anyone know of such an adapter?
 amazon Canada would be wonderful as I have a gift card balance just now.
 If confusing, ask questions that make it easier to follow,  my main
 computer uses Ethernet only, I have no wireless resources whatsoever.
 Thanks,
  Karen
Yes, it is possible to do that with WiFi.  I have a couple of portable routers that will do that.  However, another issue is by sharing Internet service, your landlord might be violating his terms of service with his ISP.  For example, here's something that's prohibited on Rogers.  I expect Bell will have something similar.

"use the Services for anything other than your own personal
purposes (such as reselling the Services, providing Internet
access or any other feature of the Services to any third party) or
share or transfer your Services without our express consent"

So, if your landlord has personal service for his home and shares it with tenants, he would be violating this.

Also, what privacy protection would you have, to keep him or the other tenant off your network?  Typically, you'd use a router.
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