Tuesday, October 25, 2016

London is next in line for Google-backed gigabit Wi-Fi

After New York, Intersection is bringing its gigabit Wi-Fi street furniture to London

London is next in line to receive the Link high-speed Wi-Fi service that briefly brought high-speed porn to the streets of New York.
Intersection, the company behind LinkNYC, is partnering with British telecommunications operator BT and outdoor advertising company Primesight to deliver the service in London. Intersection is partly funded by Sidewalk Labs, a subsidiary of Google's parent Alphabet.
Next year, BT will replace 100 of its phone booths with the LinkUK pillars, delivering gigabit Wi-Fi, free phone calls, and local information services on built-in Android tablets. The companies aim to install up to 750 of the hotspots across the UK in the coming years.
The pillars will also offer free power, via USB charging sockets. There's no risk of them slurping your phone's contents, or infecting them via the BadUSB vulnerabilities, as the sockets contain no data lines.
"It’s just power and ground," said BT spokesman Yusuf King.
Free web browsing will not be allowed on the London Link pillars.
When the service was introduced in New York in January, some people began using the embedded tablets to watch porn in public. LinkNYC put a stop to that last month when it shut down the web-browsing option on the pillars.
ISPs in the U.K., including BT, are required to block adult content by default, so using the tablet to watch porn ought not to be possible there.
Limiting the tablet to providing local information has other benefits, though, said King. "Another reason to remove the tablet web browser is to prevent people monopolising kiosks for long periods."
LinkUK, like LinkNYC, will be funded by advertising. Instead of the posters or wrap-around ad spots that Primesight will sell on 17,500 other BT phone booths around the U.K., the new pillars will each carry two 55-inch HD displays running non-stop commercials and public service announcements.
London's traditional red phone boxes won't disappear from London's streets with the introduction of the new pillars: Many of the 602 remaining in the London area are legally protected as historic architectural features. Instead, the pillars' brushed stainless steel and glass panels will replace a more recent generation of phone booths, made of the same materials.

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