On Thu, 2002-10-17 at 14:26, Ashcraft, Brian S (Contractor) wrote: > Let me just throw my .02 in here. I am not a lawyer, so I may be wrong. > > I have to believe that some where along the line, the cable companies End > User License Agreement is being broken. They may have worked a deal with > the local cable company to provide cable to the residents as part of their > rental agreement. However, I have to believe that this deal is exclusive to > them. Your interception and use of the signal (as a non-resident) may > infringe on this contract between the two companies. My guess is, > technically, you are breaching the EULA of the cable company, which may (or > may not) open you up to legal troubles. > How exactly can a contract between an apartment complex and a cable company be broken by a random third person who isn't associated with either of the parties who signed the contract? If the EULA is being breached, it is by the apartment complex who is failing to secure their network from being used by people not included in the contract, not by random people who just happen to live within range of the signal.
> Then again, I could be wrong :) > > Luck, > > -b- > > -----Original Message----- > From: Johannes Ullrich [mailto:jullrich@;euclidian.com] > Sent: Wednesday, October 16, 2002 1:49 PM > To: Amit P. Gandre; [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: WIRELESS THEFT > > > > Hi > > Can someone tell me if there are any laws regarding wireless > > theft? > > I don't think Congress has caught up with this yet. But from what > I hear (usual disclaimer: INAL), you are free to pick up the > signal as long as you are not breaking any WEP or other login > restriction. Its kind of like CB radio. Everyone can legally listening > to you chatting on CB radio. > > > -- > -------------------------------------------------------------------- > [EMAIL PROTECTED] Collaborative Intrusion Detection > join http://www.dshield.org -- Jason Kohles [EMAIL PROTECTED] Senior Engineer Red Hat Professional Consulting