Basically title. I remember reading about it back in like 2018, I even remember a company that would provide crypto based on the amount of traffic you let through. Just curious if that ever saw any growth.
Everything I google keeps bringing up things on the darkweb. The goal of this was explicitly to go “ISP-less”. Like they envisioned mesh net covering giant swathes of space.
I think what you’re talking about is mesh networking?
Basically, but I swear I remember a push that amounted to “What if we made a HUGE mesh”. Based on other comments though it looks like I may be misremembering a developing IoT protocol.
i don’t think you’re misremembering it, it’s just that there was a huge commercial push to quash the idea of a “communist internet” that would cut them out of the business by sharing cheap/free internet service. plus, the tech evolved.
but the idea of mesh wifi didn’t die. in several major cities, mesh wifi/internet solutions exist. NYC Mesh, for example, is the local mesh network here in NYC:
We are a diverse group of volunteers dedicated to ending the digital divide and extending high-speed, reliable internet to all New Yorkers. You can help by joining our community network to get online, volunteering to connect neighbors or grow the network, and donating to improve our community infrastructure and ensure access for all.
THANK YOU. This was bugging the crap out of me. I live in the country now so it’s doubtful if I setup the hardware it would even be of utility, but I was just curious what became of it. There’s another comment that goes into all the different varieties.
Glad to see the NYC mesh. For a while I lived in an area that was basically that but paid. It was small “city”, and someone bought rights to tap into a giant line that happened to go through the city. They set up radio broadcasters, and to get service you’d use one of their radio modems. It wasn’t free, but very community based. You’d see the business owners out and about. You’d see “Bob” at the bar, then might see him climbing your neighbors buildings roof to put up a repeater. Prices and speeds were great but mostly service was awesome. It was “your friendly neighborhood ISP”. I got the impression the business was doing well but probably wouldn’t like, list on the stock market or anything. It was just really cool to see an ISP have the character of say, a solid restaurant that everyone in town knows.
Batman? I believe it was a mesh protocol
ok, I 100% thought you were screwing with me based on my user name…
Also related to Batman is bmx, such as bmx6. I forget if it’s separate or something that works together with batman it’s been a while since I touched it
I remember there being a YouTube video of some people that did it in a small town (or neighborhood) and made, essentially, a DIY neighborhood mesh network. I keep looking up stuff, and I’m only finding terms like “relay mesh.” If I find the YouTube video after a reasonable search, I’ll edit.
EDIT: Was the term WISP (Wireless ISP) network? It’s a setting you can do on your router and what the videos I was watching were talking about. The YouTube channel is Freethink, and they cover it being done in Detroit, NYC, and Dylan’s Beach.
Thank you!!
You are thinking of MeshNet.
You may be thinking of BGP: Border Gateway Protocol. it’s a gateway protocol that routes internet data between asynchronous systems.
https://www.fortinet.com/resources/cyberglossary/bgp-border-gateway-protocol
We use this a lot for company to company networks
Helium is a crypto based on LoRaWAN, which is essentially a wireless long-range low-bandwidth network designed for IoT devices. The idea is that helium coins/tokens are awarded to users based on how much traffic their node carries.
I think helium is the company I’m thinking of, but I swear there was a focus on everyday, not just IoT
The biggest push I recall was part of One Laptop Per Child which was much longer ago. https://www.networkworld.com/article/2284035/coming-to-a-watering-hole-near-you--olpc-s-mesh-networking.html
Reticulum network maybe? There was also Mycelium, but never got out of pre-alpha