Friday, 26 December 2014

Hotels at it again – application to FCC to start jamming personal WiFi – update

You may remember a post in October of this year about the Marriot chain being fined $600,000 after its hotel in Nashville, Tennessee was found guilty of blocking guests' mobile WiFi. Apparently the purpose was to encourage use of the Marriot’s own WiFi at between $250 & $1,000.

Now a group of hoteliers, including Hilton & Marriott, are asking the US Federal Communications Commission to grant permission for them to recommence disruption of guests personal WiFi. Claims include that personal Wifi can, “cause degraded service, insidious cyber-attacks & identity theft."

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2014/12/23/us_hotel_chains_and_tech_firms_square_off_with_fcc_over_wifi_hotspots/

http://www.wsj.com/articles/a-wi-fi-problem-for-hotels-1419812931?mod=LS1 / hotel sells dedicated wireless services custom networks convention prices access point Gaylord Opryland hotel Nashville Tennessee block guests' personal hotspots Marriott Hotel Services $600,000 agreement penalty Federal Communications Commission settle allegations hotel chain interfered disabled Wi-Fi networks consumer consumers conference facilities Nashville hotel March 2013 nine-page jamming mobile hotspots convention space FCC employees containment features WiFi monitoring system prevent consumers connecting to the Internet personal WiFi networks personal portable Wi-Fi WiFi device data leakage violation advisories forbids blocking jamming interference authorized radio communications Jeff Flaherty Marriott spokesman hotel chains want permission disrupt guests guest personal Wi-Fi hotspots force people use expensive hotel wireless hoteliers including Hilton Marriott watchdog FCC cripple mobile hotspots devices interfere wireless networks on-site security risk Wi-Fi ncreasingly popular connecting Internet Commission rules network operators petition network operators manage networks secure reliable Wi-Fi service de-authentication packets /

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