  oliphant I Have 8 Boobies Premium join:2004-11-26 Corona, CA | reply to Karl Bode Re: Deserved arrest
Wow...cool.
It's the 4th and my neighbor has a nice pool. Wonder if they would mind me taking a dip and using their BBQ...after all nobody is harmed. |
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  Karl Bode News Guy join:2000-03-02 | Physical real world trespass comparisons are stupid and you know it. |
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  oliphant I Have 8 Boobies Premium join:2004-11-26 Corona, CA | And that would be how? No one is harmed in either case. It's an 'intrusion' in either case. We're using stuff that doesn't belong to us without knowledge of the OWNER in either case. I see it as a DIRECT comparison. |
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  Karl Bode News Guy join:2000-03-02
Host: Road Runner PC gaming GAMES PC gaming Tech
| quote: And that would be how? No one is harmed in either case. It's an 'intrusion' in either case. We're using stuff that doesn't belong to us without knowledge of the OWNER in either case. I see it as a DIRECT comparison.
And that's a flaw in logic. Your pool is not sitting open and inviting in the middle of the street. It's probably fenced behind your house to avoid such intrusions. As your hotspot should be. |
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  iamsomeone
@rr.com
| the pool is "almost" a fair comparison except.... it would be an equal comparison if your pool had a sign on it saying anyone is free to use it and you standing by the sign waving for people to come in. Your pool does not have a setting that can be set to assign leases to all incoming connections or to be "private". AP's can be set either to only allow some connections or to "allow" everything, and assign a "lease" to whichever computers within range. If it's set to assign a lease to whatever is in range, then it makes sense that this would constitute "permission"---- unless there is some sort of security or encryption that the user is "tricking" or "hacking". Security in itself does not change whether it's illegal or not to connect, but if there is security then the user connecting is lying about it's identity which would seem to relate to "obtaining property (service) under false pretenses". |
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  oliphant I Have 8 Boobies Premium join:2004-11-26 Corona, CA
edit: July 4th, @06:02PM
| So if you leave your door unlocked that is permission for me to enter. That's fine.
An AP is a gate. Encryption is a lock on the gate.
You must actively connect to the AP just as you must open the gate. Neither imply permission to do anything. |
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 BosstonesOwn
join:2002-12-15 Everett, MA clubs:
·Comcast
·Comcast Formerly ..
| said by oliphant :So if you leave your door unlocked that is permission for me to enter. That's fine. An AP is a gate. Encryption is a lock on the gate. You must actively connect to the AP just as you must open the gate. Neither imply permission to do anything. See you go back to a physical intrusion which is nothing like a broadcast item. You are putting it out to be seen by many. You don't leave a door open and a sign saying come in and take what you want. -- "It's always funny until someone gets hurt......and then it's absolutely friggin' hysterical!" |
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  SometimeWarDriver
@146.148.x.x
| reply to oliphant Let's try another analogy. You're driving down a country road and you miss your turn. You need to turn around. From Driver's Ed, you remember that the safe, legal way to turn around is to back into a driveway on your right, then turn left onto the road. So you do just that. In effect, you use someone's private property without their permission in order to get or enhance your access to the public network of roads. Did you commit criminal trespass? Maybe so, in a technical, legalistic sense. Could you be prosecuted for it? Maybe if you were a bank robber and did this in the course of trying to make your getaway. But if using someone's driveway to turn around were your only offense, any attempt to prosecute you would be laughed out of court. (It would be different, mind you, if the owner had put up signs at the end of his driveway saying "POSTED - NO TRESPASSING - DON'T EVEN THINK ABOUT TURNING AROUND HERE!")
Here's another. We're at a picnic in the park. You have a bottle of soda. I've gone on a hike and left a bottle opener on my cooler. You borrow my opener, without my permission, to open your drink. I return just in time to catch you in the act and I accuse you of theft. Am I acting reasonably?
One more. I work in an office where pads and pencils are not provided. Employees are expected to bring their own Post-Its and Bics. I go to visit a coworker in his cubicle but he isn't there. Am I behaving acceptably if I pick up his pen and write him a note on a piece of his paper, or does that constitute theft of his office supplies?
Fact is, people use each other's property all the time, often without explicit permission. Where do you draw the line between reasonable borrowing and criminal theft? |
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  wifi sucks
@verizon.net
| said by "SometimeWarDriver": Maybe if you were a bank robber and did this in the course of trying to make your getaway. But if using someone's driveway to turn around were your only offense, any attempt to prosecute you would be laughed out of court. (It would be different, mind you, if the owner had put up signs at the end of his driveway saying "POSTED - NO TRESPASSING - DON'T EVEN THINK ABOUT TURNING AROUND HERE!")
Thank you, excellent example. Again, people - "notice", and "intent". Those are really the key issues here. The wireless AP mfgs need to implement a mean to provide clear notice, and they need to do it *stat*, or there are going to be more of these annoying and hap-hazardly prosecuted cases, further muddying the legal issues involved. |
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