Google Wants Another Court To Determine If Accessing Open WiFi Is Wiretapping

from the maybe-someone-who-understands-tech dept

After an apparently, technically clueless judge ruled last week that WiFi is not a radio communication, and thus suggested Google’s collection of open WiFi data represents illegal wiretapping, Google has asked for an immediate appeal on that point, noting that “reasonable judges could disagree,” and that fighting a whole trial on other points wouldn’t make sense if another court says WiFi is, in fact, a radio communication and, thus, an open WiFi network is not subject to wiretap laws.

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Comments on “Google Wants Another Court To Determine If Accessing Open WiFi Is Wiretapping”

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50 Comments
Pat says:

What is 3G

It easy to make light of this. But why is google trying and what are mobile phones running on, how do you determine on a moble device if it is using a open network or 3G and who has the access. what about a secure wireless networks, interpretation is the thing that ness to be addresses. guess he has to look at all the possible cases. Anybody can collect data from a non secure source but if it is without the knowledge of the user who should be held accountable if it goes a miss. How many people do not understand that in open wireless networks people can steel private information, Maybe he is just trying to save some that knows as much about it as he does. You never know!

Anonymous Coward says:

Radio

The judge was “technically clueless” about radio being radio? Not likely, since everybody knows what radio is. We all grew up with it, remember?

That was a “bought” judge. Google has many enemies (its commercial competitors) who are desperate to see its wings clipped. There are none so blind as those who will not see.

abc gum says:

What is 3G

You have asked a lot of irrelevant questions.

Judge Ware concludes that:

the wireless networks were not readily accessible to the general public as defined by the particular communications system at issue, wireless internet networks, which are not “radio communications,” as the term was intended by Congress in drafting Section 2510(16).

anoncow says:

Uhmm, the FCC (& ETSI, etc) certifies all commercial wifi gear, both AP & stations. They are regulated as radio emitters, bound by federal law to specific radio frequencies (2.4 Ghz, 5.x GHz, etc) and energy limits. They share radio spectrum with things like Bluetooth devices and baby monitors. The power emmision limits (EIRPs) are expressed as milliwatts (or watts if running Point to Point, generally not applicable to google mapping), like a (tiny) radio station. They are measured and regulated for Specific Absorbtion Rates (SAR) like a cell phone and other radio emmitters The US military requires them to change radio frequency (A band only) when they interfere with their 5 GHz spectrum radar.

Any judge so ignorant of the fundamentals of a technology should recuse themselves or get a tutor before sitting in judgement of said tech.

Jon B. (profile) says:

Re:

Consider cordless household phones that operate on the 900MHz, 2.4GHz and 5.4GHz frequecenies. These radio frequencies are in the same range as some wifi. Remember talking on these phones, and sometimes, if you accidentally got on the wrong channel and live too close to the neighbors, you could hear their conversation. These phones aren’t encrypted or anything. If you did this intentionally, surely you would agree that’s no different from wiretapping? I don’t think you want to go down the road that just because something operates on these frequencies it’s the same thing as FM radio.

That said, Google is still right. You have to consider the intent of the communication protocol. SSID broadcast is built into the protocol and happens on the same frequency. It’s not Google’s fault that the protocol makes no distinction between reading someone’s welcome mat and rifling through their underwear. What Google did is no different from what any other Wifi device does except that the Google car threw those bits into a bucket to be sorted later instead of sorting through the bits immediately.

Anonymous Coward says:

What is 3G

Judge Ware got it right.

Just because something makes use of a radio waves does not make it “radio communications” in the sense of a public broadcast. Even the most basic open wi-fi is still digital data, and requires something beyond just a radio receiver to understand.

Take a radio receiver, tune it up to your wi-fi frequencies, and listen to it. Tell me exactly how much information you can extract from the digital noise. The answer is zero.

As soon as you have to perform a step to decode digital information, you are starting to cross the line from just receiving the signal and you are moving on to trying to decode it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Consider cordless household phones that operate on the 900MHz, 2.4GHz and 5.4GHz frequecenies.

Consider that telephone calls can also be passed over ham radio. These phones also aren’t encrypted or anything and can be picked up and listened to by anybody with an appropriate receiver.

If you did this intentionally, surely you would agree that’s no different from wiretapping?

So, you’re saying that’s wiretapping? Are you sure that you want to go down *that* road and criminalize a whole bunch of amateur radio operators for something they’ve been doing for many years?

just because something operates on these frequencies it’s the same thing as FM radio.

FM is a particular type of radio modulation. I fail to see what difference the type of modulation makes.

Anonymous Coward says:

What is 3G

Take a radio receiver, tune it up to your wi-fi frequencies, and listen to it. Tell me exactly how much information you can extract from the digital noise. The answer is zero.

As soon as you have to perform a step to decode digital information, you are starting to cross the line from just receiving the signal and you are moving on to trying to decode it.

That sounds just like what some idiot (you?) said last time this came up. It was pointed out at the time that digital radio receivers pick up digital signals just fine. A point that you seem to be trying to ignore. And even analog broadcast signals can be encoded. FM stereo? The process by which the stereo information is included is called multiplex encoding. FM stereo receivers then “decode” the signal to get stereo. So you’re apparently saying that decoding an FM stereo broadcast is “wiretapping”. I find that to be ludicrous.

Maybe you should stick to more basic shilling and stay away from technical topics you obviously know nothing about.

Bergman (profile) says:

What is 3G

By that standard, if I were to broadcast a signal that amounted to “this is a private message” in Morse code, then people would be guilty of wiretapping if they owned a radio that could receive the message.

Broadcasts are broadcasts. Broadcasts in the clear are by definition not private. Encrypted broadcasts can be private, since you have to have the key or crack the encryption to listen in. But an unsecured wireless network isn’t encrypted.

abc gum says:

What is 3G

“Just because something makes use of a radio waves does not make it “radio communications””

It certainly is radio and if it is not communication, then what is it?

Ware got it wrong – laughably wrong.

I suppose demodulation could be considered decoding, but this would be counter to you argument because it includes AM, FM, etc. There is nothing magical about the demodulation of an RF signal into digital vs analog.

DannyB (profile) says:

What is 3G

> Judge Ware got it right.

Judge Ware got it wrong. Multiple ways.

It is a radio transmission.

It is also accessible to the general public just as anyone with a police scanner, walkie talkie, AM/FM/Shortwave radio, television, etc can pick up transmissions.

Anybody can take an ordinary laptop, download freely available software, and within minutes be intercepting packets from nearby WiFi networks. That is just as “generally accessible to the public” as anyone using a walkie talkie, or police scanner.

And it is a radio transmission.

> Take a radio receiver, tune it up to your wi-fi
> frequencies, and listen to it. Tell me exactly how
> much information you can extract from the digital
> noise. The answer is zero.

Like I said. A laptop. Freely available software. Within minutes you’ll be seeing all of the contents of packets right before your eyes. If someone logs into, for instance, Facebook, using an unencrypted transmission (eg, radio) you are picking up that radio broadcast out of the air and can see their password right on your screen.

How did you think FireSheep worked?

DannyB (profile) says:

Re:

As I point out elsewhere, it is as much a publicly accessible radio transmission as Walkie Talkie, Baby Monitor, Shortwave, Police Radio, AM/FM, TV, etc.

Anyone with the proper receiver can listen in to your baby monitor.

Anyone with a laptop and freely available software can within minutes be looking at all nearby WiFi packets being broadcast into the air. If someone nearby logs in to, say, Facebook, using an unencrypted connection, you can see their password on your screen.

Anonymous Coward says:

What is 3G

DannyB, what I find amazing is that you wrote out the whole post and didn’t realize that you proved my point for me.

You said: “Anybody can take an ordinary laptop, download freely available software, and within minutes be intercepting packets from nearby WiFi networks. That is just as “generally accessible to the public” as anyone using a walkie talkie, or police scanner.”

That is the crux of the matter. As soon as you make a transformative step, you have decoded the transmission. The packets of data are not “generally accessable to the public” without special tools to decode them. More importantly, the other data that is on that wi-fi connection (beyond the SSID) isn’t generally accessed by the public. Taking the time to decode and store it is itself crossing the line.

If you can hear it with your human ears and figure out what it is, more power to you. When you have to use technology to determine what is in it, you have cross the line to decoding.

“freely available software” is not a legal litmus test for figuring out if your actions are legal.

Anonymous Coward says:

What is 3G

The packets of data are not “generally accessable to the public” without special tools to decode them.

You just get more ridiculous. By that reasoning, radio isn’t generally accessible to the public without special tools to receive it, namely, radio receivers.

If you can hear it with your human ears and figure out what it is, more power to you.

If you can hear radio with just your human ears, you aren’t “the general public” either.

“freely available software” is not a legal litmus test for figuring out if your actions are legal.

And modulation type is not the a legal litmus test for figuring out if something is radio.

Typical copyright industry shill.

Jon B. (profile) says:

Re:

You managed to miss the entire point of my comment.

Do you not agree that someone (neighbors, cops, Google) spying on your cordless phone conversation would be considered wiretapping?

My point was that you can’t make the type of radio wave your sole consideration for what constitutes wiretapping. Lots of things are transmitted over radio waves. Some are private (like phone calls) and some are not.

I did say that Google is still right for other reasons, though.

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