Open Wireless Movement, a joint project of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Fight for the Future, Mozilla, Free Press and others, will reveal its sharing-friendly wifi router firmware at the HOPE X conference in NYC next month. The openwireless operating system allows you to portion out some of your bandwidth to share freely with your neighbors and passersby, while providing a high degree of security and privacy for your own communications.
The Open Wireless Movement’s goals are to both encourage the neighborliness that you get from sharing in your community, and undermining the idea that an IP address can be used to identify a person, establishing a global system of anonymous Internet connectivity. The project includes an excellent FAQ on the myths and facts about your legal liability for things that other people do with your network.
Kamdar said that the new firmware utilizes smart technologies that prioritize the network owner’s traffic over others’, so good samaritans won’t have to wait for Netflix to load because of strangers using their home networks. What’s more, he said, “every connection is walled off from all other connections,” so as to decrease the risk of unwanted snooping.
Additionally, EFF hopes that opening one’s Wi-Fi network will, in the long run, make it more difficult to tie an IP address to an individual.
“From a legal perspective, we have been trying to tackle this idea that law enforcement and certain bad plaintiffs have been pushing, that your IP address is tied to your identity. Your identity is not your IP address. You shouldn’t be targeted by a copyright troll just because they know your IP address,” said Kamdar.
New open-source router firmware opens your Wi-Fi network to strangers [Joe Silver/Ars Technica]