An ISP can't connect traffic to an individual. They can't magically prohibit law breaking. They can't perfectly secure their wifi access points.<p>Yet these laws would hold private citizens accountable if they are not capable of doing these things.<p>(To say nothing of those businesses that offer free and open WiFi access to all comers.)<p>It's surprising to me, in democratic nation after nation, that we're hearing these same arguments again and again: The straight-faced assertion that citizens should have a greater legal responsibility than corporations and that they should have inherently fewer rights (to freely share their internet connection if they wish).
I was surprised that, after having DSL problems, my not-very-technical friend cracked 5 APs in his area in less than a day.<p>Now, <i>I</i> can do this, as can some of my geek friends, but the fact that this guy easily did it was pretty amazing to me. It also shows that you can't hold people responsible for what comes across their wire.
Ultimately, there is nothing that can be done about sharing data.<p>We're at the beginning of a cascading stupid-decision phenomenon. But, at some point we are going to have rethink our reward paradigm.<p>Change the meaning of money?
Will we start to see attempts to ban "old" and insecure wireless routers? If your router only does WEP then you're open to this kind of attack, and no amount of configuring it will fix it...