MESSAGE
DATE | 2016-01-27 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [Hangout-NYLXS] Network monopoly in NYC
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http://motherboard.vice.com/read/how-a-diy-network-plans-to-subvert-time-warner-cables-nyc-internet-monopoly?utm_source=mbfb
How a DIY Network Plans to Subvert Time Warner Cable's NYC Internet Monopoly
Written by Jason Koebler
January 25, 2016 // 04:00 PM EST
Image: NYC Mesh
In a warehouse basement in Brooklyn’s Red Hook neighborhood late last
year, a handful of self-taught network engineers gathered to casually
discuss how they might make Time Warner Cable irrelevant in their lives.
Toppling—or at least subverting—a telecom monopoly is the dream of many
an American, who are fed up with bait-and-switch advertising campaigns,
arbitrary data caps, attacks on net neutrality, overzealous political
lobbying, lackluster customer service, and passive-aggressive service
cancellation experiences that are a common experience of simply being a
broadband internet customer these days. The folks at NYC Mesh are
actually doing something about it.
Motherboard made a podcast about NYC Mesh earlier this month. You can
subscribe to Radio Motherboard on iTunes.
On any given weekend, Brian Hall and his fellow organizers can be found
around the city, installing directional wifi routers on rooftops. Anyone
in the city who lives near another person on the network is welcome to
join, and NYC Mesh volunteers will help you install a rooftop router.
“Two weeks ago, Jonathan decided he wanted to put a router in his
backyard,” Hall told me, referring to one of his organizers. “We were
initially going to put it on the top of a telegraph pole. But we
couldn’t figure out how to get up there, so he started climbing a tree,
it was so far up. There’s now a router at the top of a tree in Park Slope.”
Image: NYC Mesh
The DIY network relies on “mesh” routing. The concept is quite simple.
Your home wifi router provides internet to anyone with a wifi-capable
device in your home. But routers also have the ability to connect to and
talk to each other. By “meshing” them, or connecting them together, you
are creating a larger wifi zone. As long as one of the routers is
connected to the internet in some way, it’s possible for anyone within
range of any of the routers to get onto the internet. You could,
theoretically, connect many routers together to create a giant wifi
hotspot that covers huge parts of New York City or any other
geographical area.
Of course, it’s not quite that simple. Every time a connection “hops,”
it slows down. If your router is connected to the internet but your
neighbor’s is not, your internet speed will be faster than his or hers.
The more hops, the more latency. This means that, for a mesh connection
to be a viable alternative to a standard one, many of the routers must
be connected to the internet.
Currently, NYC Mesh has about 40 “nodes,” or routers on the network
(they are mostly smattered around Manhattan’s East Village and
Williamsburg in Brooklyn), with more than 100 people waiting for an
install. The network is also capable of “meshing” through the internet,
meaning that if two routers are independently connected to the internet,
they can also talk to each other to be part of the same network, which
is why there are various pockets of meshes in the NYC network. NYC Mesh
explains its mission in this presentation.
Image: NYC Mesh
What NYC Mesh has accomplished so far is interesting. It’s a fun hobby
project, a cool proof-of-concept, and an interesting experiment in
what’s possible with the cooperation of a handful of strangers. But all
of the nodes are eventually routed through a Time Warner Cable internet
connection, which doesn’t do much good if you’re trying to create what
could eventually be an alternative to Time Warner. It has to become more
serious.
And so Hall has arranged agreements with two massive internet exchanges
in New York City that will allow him to install two “super nodes” that
have ranges of several miles in March of this year. Super nodes are
essentially high-powered wireless transmitters that are connected to an
internet exchange, which can be thought of as the “backbone of the
internet.” In many cases, normal internet service providers buy or lease
their bandwidth from these internet exchanges, which have names the
layperson probably hasn’t heard of.
The first super node will be at the Sabey Data Center, which is on the
Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge. The second will be at 325 Hudson,
which bills itself as a “carrier-neutral interconnection facility” that
“offers direct access to transatlantic cables, major metro and regional
fiber providers, and peering exchanges.”
“They would be connecting us directly into the backbone of the
internet,” Hall said. “We’ve met a lot of helpful people in high places
willing to donate bandwidth and to give us cheap space on a couple
internet exchange places in downtown Manhattan. It’s quite exciting
because we’ll get cheap internet and can broadcast it to Brooklyn and
downtown Manhattan.”
Images: NYC Mesh
The importance of these super nodes to the future of the network can’t
really be understated: They have a range of several miles and are
connected directly into the backbone of the internet, which allows NYC
Mesh to become its own internet service provider. Routers can also
connect directly to the super node, meaning that people who want to join
it will no longer need to live within a few hundred feet of the nearest
node. Instead, everyone who lives in lower Manhattan or along the
Brooklyn waterfront should be able to connect directly to the network.
Hall says that routers connected to the super node will be able to get
download speeds of more than 100 mbps, which is faster than many Time
Warner Cable connection options. A $95 router on your rooftop would be
able to connect to the super node, and Hall says he’s planning on
charging people a modest maintenance fee (“we’re thinking like $10 a
month or something”) to join. The super node will initially be funded by
businesses in lower Manhattan who are hoping to create redundancies
should their internet service go down during a storm, for instance.
There are still a lot of moving parts, and neither of the nodes has been
installed yet, but experts tell me there’s no reason why NYC Mesh can’t
succeed. Guifi.net is believed to be the largest mesh network in the
world—it’s an autonomous, free, community-owned network that has roughly
30,000 nodes located all over Spain. In Cuba, an illegal mesh network
called SNet has flourished, allowing people there to play games and
exchange files on a local network (Cuba’s access to the “real” internet
is severely limited by the government). Isaac Wilder and the Free
Network Foundation, meanwhile, have open sourced tools to start small
networks around the US.
Image: Guifi
Jinyang Li, a New York University professor who helped develop early
mesh networking technology, told me there simply hasn’t been much
interest in mesh networking in the United States so far.
“Mesh networks have been the only choice for people in a lot of
developing economies,” Li said. “I think in the United States the
infrastructure has been so good, so there hasn’t been incentive to build
these networks, but there’s no reason it wouldn’t work.”
As people become more and more fed up with monopolistic ISPs, there’s
growing sentiment that there must be another way.
“Everyone seems to hate Time Warner, that’s the thing that unifies the
city,” Hall said. “It’s going to be a while before we replace Time
Warner, but there’s some hope of it happening.”
Topics: Broadband access, internet access, NYC Mesh, mesh networks,
Telecom Monopolies, community broadband, Community Wifi, free wifi, Time
Warner Cable, time warner, Broadband competition, Futures, culture, power
--
So many immigrant groups have swept through our town
that Brooklyn, like Atlantis, reaches mythological
proportions in the mind of the world - RI Safir 1998
http://www.mrbrklyn.com
DRM is THEFT - We are the STAKEHOLDERS - RI Safir 2002
http://www.nylxs.com - Leadership Development in Free Software
http://www2.mrbrklyn.com/resources - Unpublished Archive
http://www.coinhangout.com - coins!
http://www.brooklyn-living.com
Being so tracked is for FARM ANIMALS and and extermination camps,
but incompatible with living as a free human being. -RI Safir 2013
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