While the hotel cannot prevent you from using Wi-Fi, but they could: a) restrict you from attaching equipment to their internet connection (unless you contracted for that and the contract didn't restrict attachments) or electrical outlets b) ask you to leave and charge you for trespassing if you didn't Its highly unlikely those renting facilities from the hotel would agree to such onerous restrictions and a hotel renting you the facilities is unlikely going to boot you out. See: http://www.wifinetnews.com/archives/007102.html for some good coverage on the Massport incident. Frank -----Original Message----- From: owner-nanog@merit.edu [mailto:owner-nanog@merit.edu] On Behalf Of Carl Karsten Sent: Wednesday, February 28, 2007 2:36 PM To: nanog@merit.edu Subject: FCC on wifi at hotel me again. So wifi at pycon 07 was 'better than 06' witch I hear was a complete disaster. More on 07's coming soon. Now we are talking about wifi at pycon 08, which will be at a different hotel (Crown Plaza in Rosemont, IL) and the question came up: Can the hotel actively prevent us from using our own wifi? _maney: although - wasn't the hotel stuck on "our wifi or no wifi" at last report? CarlFK: only the FCC can restrict radio tpollari: it's their network and their power the FCC has no legal right to that. and no, you show me where they do. I'm not wasting my day with that tripe -- the caselaw you're likely thinking of has to do with an airline and an airport and the airline's lounge, in which case they're paying for the power and paying for their bandwidth from a provider that's not the airport. We're not. I know that there are all sorts of factors, and just cuz the FCC says boo isn't the end of the story, but i don't even know what the FCC's position on this is. google gave me many hits, and after looking at 10 or so I decided to look elsewhere. Carl K