Bell Canada Turns Payphones into Public Hotspots 262
turing0 writes "Bell Canada yesterday announced a trial of a new public wifi hotspot service - currently free - with locations in either airports, railway stations or bus terminals in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Kingston. Bell has adopted an interesting twist on the hotspot in that they have built a steel armored case, in which to house the AP, a DSL modem and power supply, which is the exact dimensions of a payphone -- and mounted the whole thing in place of a single phone where there are banks of them such as you see in airports and bus terminals or subways. According to this article in the Globe and Mail Bell has still not determined the pricing model."
turing0 continues: "I attended the press conference at Toronto's Union Station, Track F, where I took a close look at the AP box which was mounted quite securely to a bank of payphones, and I was pretty impressed at how solid it appeared as various journalistic hacks took turns trying to pry the AP off the wall under the watch of Bell execs and a Bell phone tech. Bell is using Cisco AP1200's in the box as well as Alcatel ADSL modems with a 3Mb/Sec ADSL/ATM backhaul to the internet according to the Bell tech present. Various Bell types were wandering about with a pretty diverse collection of hardware such as Apple iBooks, Compaq PDA and IBM Thinkpads with 802.11 cards from Proxim, Cisco and Symbol as well as Dlink and SMC. Great use of a fully amortized asset (phone banks) and a very interesting spin on how to generate new revenue from a dying cost center - the payphone biz. Plus the added benefit of not having to negotiate new agreements with property management and landlords. Smooth move for Bell. Why didn't I think of that? Payphones, though declining in numbers, are still pretty much ubiquitous and are served with power as well as a good solid mounting location for the AP. In the final deployment Bell said that they would also be mounting AP's in the plenum and riser infrastructure of selected buildings should the full roll-out of the Accesszone product proceed. Is Bell Canada the first ILEC to recycle payphones?"
How much coverage? (Score:2, Interesting)
Good Idea (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Good Idea (Score:2, Interesting)
Amusingly, this supposedly "poor cellphone coverage" thing seems to be a myth. When I was flying out of Pearson in mid-August, my reception was just fine. I was able to carry on conversations and check my email without losing my signal.
Re:Who cares? (Score:2, Funny)
We suggest that you ameliorate the damage to you digital citizenship by reporting three of you evil, hacking, music stealing friends to TIPS.
hugs and kisses,
-- Harry Tuttle,
Cheif junior assistant overseer, TIA
I disagree (Score:4, Interesting)
Additionally, I'd rather not have to whip out my cell phone and an extra modem and cable to look up an address on my Palm. In fact, I'd like to see them put hotspots on the actual buses and commuter trains. Can you imagine how many people would start commuting if they could play BF1942 on the way to/from work?
While you're at it, tack on an extra train car that houses a bar and a bunch of networked consoles or PCs. People would be riding past their stop on purpose!
Re:I disagree (Score:2, Insightful)
As I understand the parent to your reply:
- No one is using pay phones for voice calls anymore because they have a personal phone number in their pocket
- Therefore all the payphones which the telcos have access to (and I would assume cost money to maintain) are not bringing in the dollars.
- So the conclusion can be drawn that if some other form of profit can be drawn from these payphones, it would be beneficial to the telcos.
Anyway, with that said I think this is an AWESOME idea. The pay phones have copper going to them that can run DSL, and some type of power source already at the phone.
Its so obvious I cant believe I didnt dream it up!
Scott.
WiFi Ahoy! (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh well, guess we can just hope the leave them free
Re:WiFi Ahoy! (Score:3, Interesting)
The only people who would even be likely to pay are business customers on travel, but, even then, it's not a big market.
Implications (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Implications (Score:2, Funny)
I'm confused now. Are you talking about prostitues?
Wow! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Wow! /. BFD! (Score:2)
Note to self... Check eBay.ca later today (Score:5, Funny)
--
Re:Note to self... Check eBay.ca later today (Score:2)
Never mind faking UFOs, saving the local park, battling with card building for greenstamps, launching their recording career and hanging with Davy Jones/Don Drysdale/Joe Nameth.
I say go for it.
:P
Re:Note to self... Check eBay.ca later today (Score:2, Interesting)
Just something to keep in mind.
Re:Note to self... Check eBay.ca later today (Score:2)
1) do something
2) ?
3) profit!
cliche
You obviously missed that episode of the Brady Bunch! Let me summarise-
1) The Brady family invents a new
2) Good family fun ensues!
Re:Note to self... Check eBay.ca later today (Score:2, Funny)
Bobby [woz.org] built a bluebox and haxored the phone for free calls!
Then Greg [apple.com] stole all the credit.
Interesting. Why does a alledged techno-visionary like 'Greg' not have a website to share his widsom with the masses?!!
Location Suggestion (Score:3, Funny)
Well, you would think... (Score:2)
Well, you would think that they could narrow down the locations better than that.
Toronto? Okay, let's spread out and find where the APs are located here...
Re:Well, you would think... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Well, you would think... (Score:3, Informative)
During the Bell AccessZone Wi-Fi pilot, users with 802.11b enabled devices will be able to gain free access to Bell's hotspot service in the
following high traffic locations: Toronto's Union Station; Via Rail Panorama lounge in Montreal's Central Station and Toronto's Union Station; the departure area at Montreal's Dorval International Airport; Kingston's Confederation Park and Marina supported by the Kingston Economic Development Corporation; and Kingston's St. Lawrence College. AccessZone is also available in the Air Canada Maple Leaf lounges at Pearson International Airport (Terminal 2), Dorval International Airport, and the Calgary International
Airport and will be installed in all other Maple Leaf Lounge locations. Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital and Kingston's Frontenac Public Library will also be deploying a Bell AccessZone location in the coming weeks. Other pilot locations will be introduced over the pilot period, which is expected to run until the spring of 2003.
wifi = Great (Score:5, Informative)
Re:wifi = Great (Score:2)
Why power companies aren't doing this (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why power companies aren't doing this (Score:2, Interesting)
Raf
Re:wifi = Great (Score:2)
Tape Recorder Hacking (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tape Recorder Hacking (Score:2)
Has this actually worked in the past? I'd like to know as this is the first I've ever heard of this.
Re:Tape Recorder Hacking (Score:2)
Re:Tape Recorder Hacking (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Tape Recorder Hacking (Score:3, Interesting)
There's something.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:There's something.. (Score:2)
Unless you add the word 'hockey'!
Terrorists. (Score:5, Funny)
Karma: Excellent -- Well, we'll just see about that!
How do you take payments on this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, I understand how, with a "Public Internet Terminal" like those cheesy ads on DirecTV, you get paid by people putting in money or swiping a credit card. How does this work with a wireless access point? Your card is going to pick up a signal. You may not want to key your credit card info over the airwaves to this unknown box. Do you walk up to the box, swipe your card, then key in the MAC address of your wireless card?
Basically, what's phase 2 where
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2, Insightful)
1.) You enter the "hot spot"
2.) The terminal picks up your network card and gets the mac address
3.) If your network card is set on DHCP then no matter what URL you bring up it redirects you to a payment gateway
4.) after you pay you get to go anywhere
Sounds too easy to me, perhaps this isn't possible hehe..
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Hijack access point
2) Fake service payment screens via same intercept tech
3) Profit, illegally
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
But that requires too much investment and probably isn't a good use of capital, unless you wanted to get into the land business anyway.
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:5, Informative)
1) Your laptop/PDA/whatever requests an IP address via DHCP.
2) Access point hands out IP address, makes a note against that IP address that "has not paid yet"
3) At this point, all that you can do is access HTTP and DNS.
4) You point your browser at any web site - let's say http://slashdot.org for grins.
5) DNS succeeds.
6) Your computer does an HTTP GET.
7) Access device sees you've not paid yet. Sends HTTP REDIRECT to https://fork.it.over.to.me
8) Your laptop looks that up. Gets an IP address.
9) Your laptop requests page.
10) Page comes up - input credit card here.
11) You do so. Access device marks you has "paid for 1 Hour". Ports open up.
12) You again try
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
I wonder how they'd get around this problem. hehe... Trust is a hard thing to deal with in a wireless world.
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
And if you have the same MAC, then you and he get the same packets, and neither of you can surf.
Your scheme would only work to get his info after he's left, to use the remaining minutes he bought - sort of like parking in somebody's spot after they leave, but before the meter runs out.
And as for the other poster's point about trust - that is why you make sure you use HTTPS, rather than HTTP. Then, the evil h@><0r would have to have a valid cert that the browser recognized - making it somewhat easier to track him down.
The other way to make this work would be for sell advertising - ever N minutes you are forced to sit through an ad...
<shudder>
Re:DNS == free access (Score:2)
https Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
First you get an account. You can do that using https; https will ensure that nobody nearby can see your CC details. Normal authentication will allow you to check the URL before signing on.
Once you have an account they need to protect your/their bandwidth from theft. They can do that with VPN software; the VPN software will prevent you from connecting to the wrong box.
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
Ok, replying to my own post, but it seems the easiest way to cover what many people above have said (HTTPS, port 80). What keeps you from getting an IP, establishing a (SSH/other favorite non-web protocol) connection, and using this connection without paying?
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
I mean, what's to stop them? They don't exactly have a lot of competition, especially in an airport. So if you're going to browse slashdot and check your email, you best write a fast script to hop on, download, and get off ASAP! (that alone might cost you a good $5 depending on how much email you have)
Didn't Mom always tell you to carry a quarter? (Score:2)
Seriously, as long as you registered the MAC address of the card (say, on the Bell Canada Web Site), then all you need is a pocket full of change to get access. How about 5 cents a minute, or a $1 per MB transfered?
Re:How do you take payments on this? (Score:2)
Gaining actual access to the network (or rather, outside the AP) would require some type of sign-in, that starts your billing.
Do existing agreements cover this? (Score:5, Interesting)
This assumes that their existing agreements allow them to conduct any sort of transaction on the covered property. If it limits them to phone service, they will have to renegotiate. I can't imagine many property managers would sign an agreement that lets them put anything they want in that spot.
Re:Do existing agreements cover this? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm just glad that's one place I haven't seen pasted over with advertising.
That's because property managers are buttheads! (Score:2)
Link (Score:5, Informative)
Should be interesting competition for starbucks and the like who wanted to come to Toronto and setup hotspots.
US Gov declares Bell as a Terrorist organizazation (Score:2, Funny)
The US military has sent a Delta force team into Bell HQ to take down the terrorist ring leader.
Picture (Score:5, Informative)
Don't expect a free ride from Ma Bell (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Don't expect a free ride from Ma Bell (Score:2)
that was first in Canada to impose 5 Gbyte bitcaps on so called "unlimted" usage
My ISP called saying I was using more bandwidth than "the average user". I replied "an average is made up of highs and lows, correct? I'm just keeping the average up." The lady asked me to cool the downloads but I've never heard back from them.
Statistically speaking... (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, and statistically speaking, the average user has one breast and one testicle, so what does that prove?
Re:Don't expect a free ride from Ma Bell (Score:2)
Under capitalism, how could it be free? (Score:2)
I'm not saying I like it, and I'm not trolling. If the parent post had been funny or sarcastic it would warrant no response other than a good laugh. But the poster seems to believe that any other typical for-profit corporation would provide this service for free and that Ma Bell is somehow an aberration. Sorry to burst your bubble, but when corporations are driven by profit for their shareholders, altruism becomes a breach of contract if it surpasses minor PR-value donations.
Re:Under capitalism, how could it be free? (Score:2)
In the U.S., corporations are beholden to the shareholders, the owners. If they believe the board acted in a way to hurt profits, they can take action (replacing or even suing the board). The Securities Exchange Commission is in charge of policing public corporations in this regard and others. Is there no similar concept in Canada? Or is it simply less stringent?
P.S. IANAL, nor do I study the stock market. This is my (hopefully correct) limited understanding.
the answer to how to charge is easy... (Score:5, Interesting)
Simple. Allow people to pay by purchasing prepaid cards or using their credit card and charging in block periods of 10 minutes. What's funny is that free wifi could possibly hurt the bell companies already failing payphone services even more if services that allow 'free long distance calls over the internet' become popular again. Although there is the bottleneck issue with wireless connections which would prevent that, plus the poor quality of such services usually (although I often get poor quality from many high-use area pay phones as well)
Re:the answer to how to charge is easy... (Score:2, Informative)
Also from Bell (Score:5, Informative)
I've never used one of these Internet phones, but they're basically a regular phone with a larger colour LCD display, keyboard and laptop-like pointing device. It's a pretty cool idea, but I've never seen anybody use it and I wonder if very many people would pay for wireless Internet access in a train station where 99% of the people don't wait long for a train during rush hour.
Also of note, Bell's ISP, Sympatico, has stand-alone pay per minute Internet access terminals in the station. Why would Bell compete with itself on so many levels?
Re:Also from Bell (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it's because it's basically a win-win situation. In places like Union station there are banks of pay phones, and maybe enough traffic to justify 10% or 20% of them. Replacing one phone with an Wifi stand, another with an internet phone and a third with a calling card machine, and they've still got enough pay phones to cover all the traffic. The wifi stand and the internet phone are competing with each other, but the sum is greater than either alone would be.
Re:Also from Bell (Score:2)
Got quarters? (Score:2, Funny)
Relax, it's a joke.
Great for VoIP... (Score:2, Interesting)
That's a nice way to regain some lost marketshare. It'll probably be a matter of time until VoIP cell phones hit the market in Canada...
If you can't beat them, join them... (and make them pay)
Re:Great for VoIP... (Score:2)
Internationally, charges are more of an issue, but the solution is gateways to voice over IP you can dial from a cellphone, not running voice over IP all the way to the handset.
pricing model (Score:4, Insightful)
Pricing Model v2.0 (Score:2)
This is really something where Passport type "global" authentication could come in handy. It doesn't have to be passport, but a similiar system would work well. You use whatever WAP points you want, and the Bell Canada's of the world bill your globally unique username/id to the not-for-profit org which acts sorta like a paypal.
I know Boingo is somewhat like this, but it's a level below. We need to abstract one level up.
-malakai
Never in the US (Score:3, Funny)
Wait a second (Score:2)
Uhm... so they don't know how to make money from this yet? Okay, this isn't gonna last.
Karma Whoring (Score:2, Informative)
Spam? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Spam? (Score:2)
Re:Spam? (Score:2)
Received: from delano.blitzdata.com (HELO mailer.blitzdata.com) (172.16.48.10) by mail1.blitzdata.com with SMTP; 2 Dec 2002 18:55:13 -0000
Blitzdata is pretty pink, and they're using spamware to send it. (The base64 encoding is also a tip-off.) Nice of Sympatico to share email addresses with spammers who probably sold the names out the back door on their next "Millions" CDROM.
Bell Canada Megacorp (Score:5, Interesting)
Profit? They don't need to worry about that for a long time. They could support this for a decade while the market matures and its cost would still be in with the round-off errors of their ledgers. In the meantime they'll OWN the whole deal across Canada and be damn attractive to US sites looking for a stable partner. Forget .bombs, deal with a megacorp with lots of technology already in place. Pretty attractive to a hotel, airport, or municipality.
Yeah, I think this really could bring a big change to North America. The Baby Bells in the US are fractured and hamstrung. But with the market opened up to foreign ownership and activity Bell Canada may well have found their entrée into the US market. Widespread 802.11, first domestically then in the US, that could well be their opportunity. Forget cellular or land-line, offer a last-mile wireless.
Not quite a monopoly, in the strictest sense (Score:3, Informative)
Bell is definitely pervasive in Canada, but (for the Americans who don't know, but still care) thankfully you don't HAVE to go with them on a number of aspects.
You can go with alternative long-distance companies; they may or may not have to pay Bell for the "privilege," but if you're not a Bell supporter then you can at least avoid paying the whole enchilada.
Cellphone service can be provided by Rogers [rogers.com] or Telus [telus.com] if you're so inclined. Personally, if I needed a cellphone, I think I'd go with Telus... any company that markets their products with squirrel monkeys can't be all that bad. :)
With satellite, you do have at least one other choice, StarChoice [starchoice.com]. You can also always go with cable, if you're willing to deal with the cable company (Rogers for me, often Shaw elsewhere or Videotron in Quebec).
ISPs, now there's a sore spot. In terms of DSL, the only alternatives are generally small, local services who still have to pay a bit to use Bell's lines. It's either that or cable (again). On the other hand, I know that at least one DSL provider in Ottawa supposedly goes without a transfer cap.
So you do have alternatives in most areas, but more often than not Bell is there in some capacity, or else you go with the dominating cable company in your area. At least Bell is better than AOL Time Warner down in the states, who practically dominates what Americans see and hear...
Re:Bell Canada Megacorp (Score:2)
That's bull. Plain and simple. Bell Canada is MASSIVE, and they're a GREAT BIG BLOODY MONOPOLY. Yay! They're regulated up the wing-wang. I love Bell Canada. They have to sell DSL at *extremely* fixed prices (low to consumers, and way lower to resellers), so I can get 1.2Mbit/128kbit DSL for less than $30CAD a month. (That's less than $20USD, for those non-Canadian folk reading this.)
What does Bell Canada get for this? A 20-year monopoly on providing DSL service. Of course, "monopoly" is something of a misnomer, since they're required to sell at absurdly low rates to wholesalers/resellers. So Bell may be providing the wires, but they're getting raped on cost. But they have 20 years of these prices to cover the cost of the rollout.
Rollout, I say? Yes, rollout. Ontario has an amazing ATM network, thanks to Bell Canada, and their government-granted 20-year monopoly. Not only can I get 1.2Mbit/128kbit DSL for dirt-fucking-cheap, but I can get 3.0Mbit/640kbit DSL (That's 400kB/s downloading and 80kB/s uploading) for $60CAD or less. Top that without somebody who has a huge amonut of time to cover network rollout costs!
Is Bell Canada a monopoly? Yes! Did the government give them this status? Yes! Are we thankful? YES!
/.'d (Score:2)
And I wonder how they can currently protect themselves from abuse; high-speed anonymous access=spammers/hackers haven!
Fighting for customers? (Score:2)
Now add into the mix that coffee shop is Starbucks, and can easily afford to sue the people running the phones. WiFi is going to get heavily regulated, and soon.
I predict that within the next 18 months they do a story on terrorists or bad, bad hackers using anonymous access points to do bad things and a real regulatory crush gets on, the real purpose of which will be to ensure that only Big Companies can compete to provide public WiFi.
Location, Location, Location (Score:3, Informative)
There's a list, with more promised in the near future, but for now its..
Toronto, Ontario: Union Station Panorama Lounge, Union Station
Air Canada Maple Leaf Lounge, Pearson International Airport, Terminal 2
Kingston, Ontario: Confederation Park and Marina St. Lawrence College
Montreal, Quebec: Panorama Lounge, Central Station
Dorval Airport, Departures Area Air Canada Maple Leaf Lounge, Dorval Airport
Calgary, Alberta: Air Canada Maple Leaf Lounge, Calgary International Airport.
So we have airports and train stations, not the kind of place to sit for hours just to serve up some mp3's, but since the 'Gare Central' is 5 minutes away on the Metro, I'm gonna head down this weekend and see what kinda speeds I can get
First class, VIP lounges (Score:2)
Re:Location, Location, Location (Score:2, Informative)
however i used to comute between TO and Ottawa on a weekley basis, and found my self killing a few mins ie:30-45 in the lounge all the time.
i cant see a better addition to the free drinks, free computers, free mag's, and NOW FREE WI-FI.
its not the greatest test area, but u can be sure its not going to get haxored by some leet script kiddy.
Pay? what about Authentication? (Score:2)
I can see it now... (Score:2)
It's already in the UK (Score:3, Interesting)
Not sure they quite meant it to be used this way...
Preventing net abuse? (Score:2)
Haven't seen a pay phone (Score:2)
Superman Phone Booth Dilemma.... (Score:2)
superman rushes
to save toronto, instead
crashes broadband trunk
Der Fatherland Security's Gonna Get Mad (Score:2)
Careful, Tom Ridge doesn't like open access much. If 802.11 is not not encrypted, you must be a terrorist -- see that article the other day.
I mentioned this to BT a while ago (Score:2)
They basically ignored the idea and thought it wouldn't work. I hope this proves them wrong. Imagine being able to pull up next to any payphone and get internet access. In my opinion this is one of the best ways to spread the range of hotspots at a cheap price. They don't even have to sign up the HotSpot locations as they own the spot already.
Re:Congrats on a Great Idea . . . . at least origi (Score:2, Informative)
They (Bell Canada) already have those little cubbie-holes with ethernet jacks at airports, etc, so execs can plug in and surf the net through a really limited proxy. It was like 20 bucks for a half hour last time I saw 'em at Pearson Airpot.
Y'all keep dreaming of your free broadband.
Re:Congrats on a Great Idea . . . . at least origi (Score:2)
Re:Congrats on a Great Idea . . . . at least origi (Score:2, Informative)
I see the price getting higher and higher for less and less service.
Comcast used to offer 2M down, 768k up as its regular service. Now the regular service is 1.5/128, and the aforementioned is the 'Pro' service, at a lofty premium.
Bell Canada, IIRC, now has monthly bandwidth limits on their once 'unlimited' DSL services, and charge by the byte once they're reached.
After all the
It's all downhill from here on in.. Enjoy the ride.
Rabbit Phones were the others... (Score:2)
The idea was sold as 'second generation cordless' where you used the same phone at home with a base station on your land line, but it would work within 100m or so of a public hotspot - normally near payphone banks as these had the infrastructure and were in obvious places.
Never really took off as it lost a fight against the improving analogue mobile phone coverage and handset technology. Also if you took the handset with you when you were out, what were the other members of your family meant to use?
BT over here in the UK sold a similar product recently that was a GSM mobile, but with a DECT (Digital European Cordless Telephone originally, now Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications) air interface as well, called Onephone [dectweb.com]. The idea being you could register it as a cordless handset with you DECT base station as well as have it on a GSM network.
When you made a call out it tried DECT first for lower call costs, and of course if you are in range of your landline it would ring as any other handset. It couldn't handover a call from system to the next as this was technically impossible and I have no idea what it did if it got a DECT call during a GSM call or vica versa.
To make it really useful BT sold a personal number service that would try you landline first, then try GSM to get through to the handset so you could give out a single contact number - but it was fairly expensive to rent.
Suprised that this idea hasn't been tried more often. But this is getting offtopic so a discusion for another day methinks...
Re:Sounds a bit like "Zone Phones" (Score:2)
Re:Strange market (Score:2, Insightful)