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truedelphi

(32,324 posts)
Thu Nov 14, 2013, 10:37 PM Nov 2013

Hey Hey NSA! Activists & communities build their own internets

Highly rec this article from Mother Jones. Only comment I will add of my own is that in some states here in the USA, it is illegal to create an additional internet or even ISP! I think one of the Carolinas has that law in place and there are fines and other punishments for people that set out to do so.


http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2013/08/mesh-internet-privacy-nsa-isp

On the "Mesh" - Activists & communities build their own internets

JOSEPH BONICIOLI mostly uses the same internet you and I do. He pays a service provider a monthly fee to get him online. But to talk to his friends and neighbors in Athens, Greece, he's also got something much weirder and more interesting: a private, parallel internet.

He and his fellow Athenians built it. They did so by linking up a set of rooftop wifi antennas to create a "mesh," a sort of bucket brigade that can pass along data and signals. It's actually faster than the Net we pay for: Data travels through the mesh at no less than 14 megabits a second, and up to 150 Mbs a second, about 30 times faster than the commercial pipeline I get at home. Bonicioli and the others can send messages, video chat, and trade huge files without ever appearing on the regular internet. And it's a pretty big group of people: Their Athens Wireless Metropolitan Network has more than 1,000 members, from Athens proper to nearby islands. Anyone can join for free by installing some equipment. "It's like a whole other web," Bonicioli told me recently. "It's our network, but it's also a playground."

Indeed, the mesh has become a major social hub. There are blogs, discussion forums, a Craigslist knockoff; they've held movie nights where one member streams a flick and hundreds tune in to watch. There's so much local culture that they even programmed their own mini-Google to help meshers find stuff. "It changes attitudes," Bonicioli says. "People start sharing a lot. They start getting to know someone next door—they find the same interests; they find someone to go out and talk with." People have fallen in love after meeting on the mesh.

The Athenians aren't alone. Scores of communities worldwide have been building these roll-your-own networks—often because a mesh can also be used as a cheap way to access the regular internet. But along the way people are discovering an intriguing upside: Their new digital spaces are autonomous and relatively safe from outside meddling.

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Hey Hey NSA! Activists & communities build their own internets (Original Post) truedelphi Nov 2013 OP
Good for them. dixiegrrrrl Nov 2013 #1
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