This entry was posted on 1/19/2007 9:21 PM and is filed under uncategorized.
Yet another municipality is announcing free Wi-Fi wireless access for its denizens. Is 802.11 becoming commoditized?
Portland,
Ore., is the latest city in the U.S. to begin offering its businesses,
residents and visitors free access to a muni-Wi-Fi network and the
Internet. With the deployment under way since last month, Portland is
proclaiming that 3,000 residents and businesses have already signed up
and is calling the system a success before it is anywhere near
complete.
The value for residents is clear. The value for the
town is sort of clear, even if it makes a mess of their budget. The
value for businesses, however, starts to get murky.
Consider
this. What do you do if you're a Portland area business and you've
already spent thousands of dollars putting up your own 802.11 network?
You invest in the hardware, the management software, and you pay
engineers to map out and plan the best coverage to eliminate any RF
interference. Then, the new, municipal network comes online and
interferes with yours, causing mayhem. Do you have your partner come
back out, re-align everything and then send the bill to the town? And
what about security? If you spend the money to make your system secure
(as any responsible corporation should), what do you do about employees
who what to stroll downtown on their lunch break with their laptops and
tap into the unsecured, free muni system and leave their machine and
potentially your network open to attack?
This is why enterprises
have to be ultra vigilant about their employees' use of any wireless
system, free or not, good for the community or not. Speaking from
experience, I've been on trade show floors where dozens of Wi-Fi
networks are crackling away, and it's surprising how few of them are
secured. Same goes for walking around town. From my office in
Manhattan, I could see usually about 10 Wi-Fi networks, some of them
coming form the apartment building across the street and others from
several area businesses, and none of them were secured.
Enterprises have to be more careful than that.
With
wireless access sprouting up all over, the problem is that it is
becoming an expected service, like electricity or water. People expect
it to be there like their utilities, and they expect to be able to use
it for free. The free model, while completely cool, is more of a threat
than you might think.