Marriott wifi blocking

Philip Dorr tagno25 at gmail.com
Sat Oct 4 03:11:47 UTC 2014


http://www.arrl.org/part-15-radio-frequency-devices#Definitions
http://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?node=pt47.1.15

(m) Harmful interference. Any emission, radiation or induction that
endangers the functioning of a radio navigation service or of other safety
services or seriously degrades, obstructs or repeatedly interrupts a
radiocommunications service operating in accordance with this chapter.
On Oct 3, 2014 6:17 PM, "joel jaeggli" <joelja at bogus.com> wrote:

> On 10/3/14 6:01 PM, John Schiel wrote:
> >
> > On 10/03/2014 03:23 PM, Keenan Tims wrote:
> >>> The question here is what is authorized and what is not.  Was this to
> >>> protect their network from rogues, or protect revenue from captive
> >>> customers.
> >> I can't imagine that any 'AP-squashing' packets are ever authorized,
> >> outside of a lab. The wireless spectrum is shared by all, regardless of
> >> physical locality. Because it's your building doesn't mean you own the
> >> spectrum.
> >
> > +1
> >
> >>
> >> My reading of this is that these features are illegal, period. Rogue AP
> >> detection is one thing, and disabling them via network or
> >> "administrative" (ie. eject the guest) means would be fine, but
> >> interfering with the wireless is not acceptable per the FCC regulations.
> >>
> >> Seems like common sense to me. If the FCC considers this 'interference',
> >> which it apparently does, then devices MUST NOT intentionally interfere.
> >
> > I would expect interfering for defensive purposes **only** would be
> > acceptable.
>
> if you have a device licensed under fcc part 15 it may not cause harmful
> interference to other users of the spectrum.
>
> > --John
> >
> >>
> >> K
> >
>
>
>



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