Got a BT Business Hub? Congratulations - you just became a public wi-fi hotspot!

BT has begun transforming its commercial customers' Business Hubs into OpenZone hotspots for any passing Tom, Dick or Harry to share, and leaving businesses to figure out how to opt out of the scheme after the fact.

Under the scheme, 20,000 BT Business Broadband customers have already had their hubs upgraded, with another 200,000 being seconded into the OpenZone network over the next few months.

BT has assured that everyone received a notification e-mail providing details of how to opt out of the sharing arrangement.

The e-mail sent out to business customers explains that the hub will receive an overnight upgrade, warning the user to leave it switched on and so forth, before slipping in the exciting news, at paragraph four, that following the upgrade total strangers will be able to share their bandwidth:

"After the upgrade BT Openzone will be ENABLED, offering your visitors and customers secure, public wireless internet access using your Hub as a BT Openzone wireless hotspot."

BT reckons this is just want businesses want: they'll be able to resell OpenZone vouchers to visitors and make a few quid, as well as sharing their bandwidth with all and sundry.

"Free BT public wi-fi hotspot for every business broadband customer" claims the release, proudly suggesting that "Hub owners buy BT Openzone access vouchers ... and can choose to pass the vouchers to their customers or resell the prime business service and add revenue", so you can either screw visitors to your office by selling them vouchers, or pay BT twice for the same bandwidth by giving them away.

BT claims the OpenZone users are securely separated from local users, and has the experience of Fon to back that up. But hitting customers twice for the same bandwidth is certainly a new low for the former-monopoly telco.

BT does offer instructions for turning off the hotspot, and the company isn't expecting customers to share their bandwidth for nothing. Assuming you don't disable the hotspot then you get entered into a prize draw and could be the lucky owner of an iPod Touch (8GB), or even a few hours of free OpenZone access - which might be useful if you're visiting a company that wants to sell you access.
 
S

silvermusic

Beat me to it, just reading about it on the Register. :)

As a BT Business Broadband customer it is of interest. However, I don't have a wireless router, and I don't want one either. I'm shocked that it's not an opt in rather than opt out by default though.
 
Upvote 0
G

ginantonic

We used to have a BT Home Hub (before changing to O2, much better deal, never drops out, either) and while we were waiting for it to be connected, we found we could tap into at least 3 others on the street. Having tried it again recently (just for the hell of it) hey - they'd all been encrypted.
 
Upvote 0

stugster

Free Member
Feb 1, 2007
9,060
2,076
Edinburgh, UK
considerit.com
I was ready to scream and shout at the incompetence of BT...

But wouldn't it be nice if everyone's routers did this, and you could log in securely onto the Intenret wherever you were in a hotspot?

What I wouldn't give to be able to have a QoS set up to let me keep a dynamically assigned IP and have it traverse across network boundaries without packet loss - or noticeable packet loss.

VoIP would rulez
 
Upvote 0

Latest Articles

Join UK Business Forums for free business advice