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Time Warner Lets Broadband Users Share
Time Warner Cable subscribers can share broadband Internet access via Fon
Technology's public/private Wi-Fi router.
Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service
Tuesday, April 24, 2007 06:00 AM PDT

Subscribers to Time Warner Cable Inc.'s cable modem service in the U.S. can
now share their broadband Internet connection with others through Fon
Technology SL, which provides a special public/private router.

Fon's La Fonera router lets broadband users in homes and small businesses
operate an internal Wi-Fi network that is secure and another one that is
open. Users can choose how much of their broadband capacity is dedicated to
their own use and how much is available to the public. Anyone who uses the
router to share access at home can use other La Fonera routers when they are
away from home. Other people, called "aliens," can pay US$3 per day for
access. Business users can choose another plan in which they get a portion
of that $3 per day fee instead of getting free access on the road.

This is the first such partnership in the U.S. for Fon, which works with
ISPs (Internet service providers) in several other countries. Fon has almost
60,000 "community members" in the U.S., despite the fact that most DSL
(Digital Subscriber Line) and cable modem providers don't allow their
subscribers to share a signal. Fon is talking with other ISPs in the U.S.
about similar deals, said Joanna Rees, CEO of Fon US, in San Francisco. Fon
Technology, founded in 2005, is based in Spain.

Time Warner Cable will share in the fees aliens pay, but will also benefit
because Fon makes broadband more attractive, Rees said. More consumers would
sign up for broadband if they knew they could take advantage of it on the
road, she said. In addition, La Fonera keeps neighbors from leeching off a
customer's open Wi-Fi network without signing in or paying for Fon service.

Customers will join the service through Fon, according to the companies.
Details of marketing are still being worked out, Rees said.

Time Warner Cable has 6.6 million cable modem subscribers in its 33-state
service area and delivers cable TV to 13.4 million customers. The average
speed of its standard Road Runner service is between 5M bps (bits per
second) and 7M bps, according to Time Warner.

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