Did any of you read the original posters question?  

I understand that the technology is out there to squash "ROUGE  AP's".  
Let me make this a little simpler.  Lets' say we have an office building
with 6 floors and each floor is leased to a different tenant.
Lets say that the tenant on the fourth floor decides he is sick of competing
for airwaves for his wireless system and deploys the Cisco
or Motorola system and squashes all the other tenants APs.  All the other
tenants APs now do not work because of the system which
has been put in place by the tenant on the fourth floor.  Would this be a
violation of Part-15 if all the other tenants were to file a formal
complaint with the FCC?

-------Original Message-------
 
From: Greg Ihnen
Date: 9/22/2012 5:34:47 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] Can they really do this?
 
There's a current debate raging right now on the NANOG list about the ins
and outs of setting up large temporary networks for things like conventions.



This one post caught my attention. Has anyone heard of a WiFi AP that will 
spoof neighboring networks to intentionally interfere with them, not by 
occupying/jamming the spectrum in a brute force way, but rather by 
impersonating the other network and rejecting new associations?
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