, SecurityFocus 2002-05-08
An ambitious hackware project promises to bring illicit broadband "uncapping" to the masses, and with it the risks that come with high-speed hijinks.
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Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-09
Anonymous (6 replies)
Anonymous (6 replies)
Yeah well...
2002-05-09
Myko (8 replies)
Myko (8 replies)
Yeah well...
2002-05-09
Anonymous (3 replies)
Anonymous (3 replies)
Yeah well...
2002-05-09
Anonymous (5 replies)
Anonymous (5 replies)
You are idiots!!!!
2002-05-10
Anonymous (3 replies)
Anonymous (3 replies)
Re: Yeah well...
2002-05-09
Tornberry (2 replies)
Tornberry (2 replies)
Thanks, but...
2002-05-09
Myko (8 replies)
Myko (8 replies)
Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-10
RayReis (at) aol (dot) com [email concealed] (1 replies)
RayReis (at) aol (dot) com [email concealed] (1 replies)
Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-09
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)
Cable Modem Hacking Goes Mainstream
2002-05-10
Anonymous (4 replies)
Anonymous (4 replies)
This Is Why DSL Rules
2002-05-10
Anonymous (2 replies)
Anonymous (2 replies)

If it's uncapped, it can turn into tragedy of the commons really fast.. Two people on your segment uncap, and set up all sorts of servers. If I couldn't do what I wanted to do, and if monitoring the line reveals people are hogging bandwidth, I wouldn't hesistate to bust them. Two people are seeing 200% improvement, while everybody else gets worse than dial-up speeds (when my connection drops pathetically for more than a few hours, I call up tech support and shake my fist).
You ain't the only one that pays for the service, boy...
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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/articles/394/12402#12402