BTW... I sent email back to the folks there suggesting that this
should be something that freenetworks.org should be tracking and
perhaps we can help.

Tim

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*Electronic Frontier Foundation Joins Wireless Crusade

New Project Tracks Wireless-Friendly Service Providers

Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Release

For Immediate Release: Thursday, July 25, 2002

San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) today
posted a list of Internet service providers (ISPs) that allow
customers to share wireless Internet access with their neighbors
and passers-by through the use of low-cost wireless hubs.

Wireless community networks provide Internet services to anyone in
the vicinity of a wireless hub in the network without all participants
having to sign up with a traditional Internet Service Provider
(ISP). This relatively new and grassroots phenomenon democratizes
access to Internet services and helps to span the digital divide
by providing anyone within the physical vicinity access to the
Internet. In more concentrated wireless service areas, wireless
networks provide seamless Internet connectivity to people who travel
through a geographical area.

"Sharing wireless access is a valuable community service, but many
ISPs don't see it that way," said EFF Senior Intellectual Property
Attorney Fred von Lohmann. "Some, like New York's Time Warner Cable,
have begun enforcing radical terms of service that let them sue
customers who share wireless access."

"There's a huge demand for the freedom to operate community wireless
access points," von Lohmann added. "We're making sure people have
the information to make informed decisions when they choose their
ISPs and identifying vendors who can provide that service."

Wireless community networks are an explosive phenomenon, with
millions of wireless cards sold in the US every year. One community
wireless network group, NYC Wireless, provided critical infrastructure
after the September 11th tragedy. Just as today's amateur radio
operators backstop emergency services in times of need, so will
tomorrow's community "freenets" form a bulwark against disaster.

For this release:
http://www.eff.org/Infra/Wireless_cellular_radio/
200207012_eff_wireless_pr.html

For the list:
http://www.eff.org/Infra/Wireless_cellular_radio/
wireless_friendly_isp_list.html

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