Warchalking
Warchalking is the drawing of symbols in public places to advertise an open Wi-Fi network. Inspired by hobo symbols, the warchalking marks were conceived by a group of friends in June 2002 and publicised by Matt Jones who designed the set of icons and produced a downloadable document containing them.[1][2] Within days of Jones publishing a blog entry about warchalking, articles appeared in dozens of publications and stories appeared on several major television news programs around the world.[2]
The word is formed by analogy to wardriving, the practice of driving around an area in a car to detect open Wi-Fi nodes. That term in turn is based on wardialing, the practice of dialing many phone numbers hoping to find a modem.[3]
Having found a Wi-Fi node, the warchalker draws a special symbol on a nearby object, such as a wall, the pavement, or a lamp post.[2] Those offering Wi-Fi service might also draw such a symbol to advertise the availability of their Wi-Fi location, whether commercial or personal.[4]
This section needs expansion with: Cites establishing either A) warchalking was actually used in the field, or B) the opposite. If it was never actually used, this article may be miscategorized. You can help by . (June 2013) |
See also[]
- Hotspot (Wi-Fi)
- Mesh networking
- SSID
- Wifi analyzer
- NetStumbler
- Wardriving
- Hobo code
References[]
- ^ "Let's Warchalk" (PDF). Matt Jones. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-05. Retrieved 2008-10-09.
- ^ a b c "Chalk points to wireless internet". BBC. 2002-07-22. Retrieved 2008-10-09.
- ^ "Welcome to the era of drive-by hacking". BBC. 2001-11-06. Retrieved 2008-10-09.
- ^ Clyde, Laurel A. (2003). "Wi-fi and Warchalking". Teacher Librarian. 31: 44–46.
External links[]
- Langley, Nick (23 June 2003). "The demise of the warchalkers". ComputerWeekly. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
- Computer security exploits
- Wi-Fi
- Graffiti and unauthorised signage