The extra mile does become difficult when there are 15-20 different broadcasts, all coming from linksys of one type or another.I quantified what the ‘extra mile’ is. It took me less than 4 seconds to check what wireless network I was attached to. I suggest that it is worth the extremely small effort. Not to do so strikes me as not caring at all. Not caring is simply… not good.
The answer to why internet piggy backing is inherently wrong is because of ownership. You may not take or use something that does not belong to you without the owners permission. ISP’s do not sell subscribers a transferable license (this is their right), so the subscriber does not own the service. Ownership remains with the ISP. The ISP does not wish to give away service for free, (and again, that is their right). Therefore getting service in this fashion is stealing.
Not only interesting, but almost always true. Sins almost always are determined in part by intent. It is practically impossible to know intent (unless you are the intender, or God) therefore assumptions of intent need to be stated to properly determine if a behavior is sinful.
Dan
But that last part I will be in agreement with, ultimately the intent will dictate the morality.
Am I there to hijack the bandwidth? Am I there to avoid being tracked??
Am I simply there because I need to log in to the computers at work and fix a user issue?