I work for an NREN that connect educations to one another and to the
internet. We received questions from institutions who want to offer
non-educational guests access to their network. They use eduroam. We are
in favor of minimizing the number of SSIDs. We recently started with
experimenting a service that allows guests to make use of the eduroam
SSID. Institutions can request guest accounts with us. These guest
accounts use our Radius server to authenticate. We only grant user
accounts to the R&E community. Alternatively, users can SMS a secret
code to a dedicated number and they receive the username and password on
their smartphone, via SMS. (The advantage is that we have their phone
number and hence can find out who they are if something happens on the
network. The contact person is informed of the request via e-mail. A
conformation before the usernames and password is granted is optional)
The institutions remain liable for the behavior of their guests on the
network. All guest accounts have a limited duration.

Bottom-line: a very similar policy as David described, but no extra
SSIDs or other Wi-Fi resources or maintenance is needed to support
guests. We have limited experience with the execution of the service,
though.
-Frans

On 1/16/14 10:55 PM, Alexander, David wrote:
> We have had a policy in place for several years requiring guests to be
> sponsored by an employee in order to use our wireless network.  There
> are two types of sponsorship – short term (5 days) and long term (30
> days).  In addition, sponsored guests must register their network
> devices via MAC address registration to gain access to the network.
> 
>  
> 
> Our guest wireless implementation has caused some issues with public
> areas like our student center and event spaces which host groups of
> people who require network access, and the identity of the guests isn’t
> always known in advance.
> 
>  
> 
> I wanted to know about guest network access policy at other schools, and
> I’d appreciate your feedback on the following questions:
> 
>  
> 
> 1)      Do you allow guests on your wireless network?
> 
> a.       If you allow guests, what steps do they need to take to gain
> access to the network (eg. sponsorship, MAC registration, open network)?
> 
> b.      If you require sponsorship or device registration, can you
> explain the process or give me a pointer to your policy?
> 
> 2)      Is your wireless network completely open in any part of your
> campus (eg. Library, student center, event spaces, athletic fields, etc.)?
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Dave
> 
>  
> 
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