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posted by Blackmoore on Friday December 19 2014, @10:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the now-thats-social-networking dept.

Over at PandoDaily, Nanthaniel Mott writes, Are Peer-to-Peer Mesh Networks the Future of Internet Freedom?

"Open Garden has raised $10.8 million to create the next Internet. And as crazy as that sounds, thanks to the success of its FireChat peer-to-peer messaging service, it might just work.

Instead of sending messages through an Internet connection or cellphone network, FireChat uses the Bluetooth and WiFi radios on every smartphone to create its own “mesh network,” which can then transfer data between the networks’ members without requiring any external infrastructure.

That second Internet, or Internet Two or whatever it will be called, is likely to become increasingly popular in the coming years. Countries around the world have started to restrict Internet freedoms, whether it’s through laws requiring companies to keep data on domestic servers or via the imprisonment of people who use the Internet to share information the government doesn’t want them to share."

Are peer-to-peer mesh networks the future of internet freedom?

 
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  • (Score: 2) by aristarchus on Friday December 19 2014, @10:47PM

    by aristarchus (2645) on Friday December 19 2014, @10:47PM (#127606) Journal

    Next question? (The whole "net neutrality" debate appears to be going south.)

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 4, Informative) by jelizondo on Saturday December 20 2014, @12:48AM

    by jelizondo (653) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 20 2014, @12:48AM (#127627) Journal

    Damn right! Actually it is already south of the border. On July 8, the LEY FEDERAL DE TELECOMUNICACIONES Y RADIODIFUSIÓN (Federal Law on Telecommunications and Radio) was approved, establishing net neutrality in Mexico for all Internet access providers (Art. 145) forbbiding providers from "obstructing, interfering with, filtering or discriminating among applications, content or services."

    Not quite happy with Mexico's government on Human Rights and other issues, but at least they got this one right.