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London cops get tough with "piggybackers"

Many Internet users, both within and outside the online gambling milieu, keep pace with advances in technology that add convenience and versatility to their activities. Such a facility is the use of home wireless networks that enable users to work or move around the home with their hardware...but there's a risk attached as recent prosecutions in London, England have shown.

   
London police have warned wireless users to ensure their networks are adequately password protected to avoid criminal intrusions, but also to exclude "bandwidth thieves" from taking up a position in the vicinity and "piggybacking" on their subscribed service.

The warning came after a 39-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of using someone else's wireless Internet connection without permission, police said this week. Officers spotted the man using a laptop as he sat on a wall outside a house in Chiswick, west London.

He told officers he had browsed the Internet via an unsecured broadband link from a nearby house, Scotland Yard said.

He was arrested and later released on police bail to November 11 pending further inquiries.

"This arrest should act as a warning to anyone who thinks it is acceptable to illegally use other people's broadband connections," said Detective Constable Mark Roberts, of the Metropolitan Police.

"Computer users need to be aware that this is unlawful and police will investigate any violation we become aware of."

The practice, known as piggybacking, breaches the Computer Misuse Act and the Communications Act, he added.

Earlier this year, a man and a woman were arrested in the Midlands for wireless theft as they sat in their cars.

Gregory Straszkiewicz, from west London, is believed to be the first person to be convicted of the offence in 2005. He was fined GBP 500 and given a 12-month conditional discharge.

Internet security experts say people should secure their wireless connections or leave themselves open to identity theft and fraud.
 
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