Cuba has an illegal 'Internet' that connects thousands of computers

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,288   +192
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cuba illegal underground internet thriving internet network wifi illegal snet streetnet

Some have argued that Internet access is now a human right but you won’t hear such poppycock in Cuba. With home Internet connectivity reserved for a select few and public Internet cafes and hotels charging roughly a quarter of a month’s salary for just an hour of web time, it’s simply impossible for most to use a service that the majority of us take for granted.

In its absence, however, young Cubans have come up with their own solution. Since 2001, these rebels have created a homegrown version of the Internet called SNet, short for streetnet.

cuba illegal underground internet thriving internet network wifi illegal snet streetnet

Located in Havana, SNet consists of roughly 9,000 computers connected over a piecemeal network of hidden Wi-Fi antennas and Ethernet cables, some of which are strung over rooftops and city streets.

It’s not the real Internet but you may not even notice at first as hundreds can be found playing Call of Duty or World of Warcraft at any given time. Chat rooms are also popular as people enjoy trading photos, telling jokes and even organizing real-world events.

Because using Wi-Fi equipment without a license in Cuba is illegal, SNet is technically an illegal operation. But those that helped build the network – like 22-year-old Antonio Broche Moreno – say the government is aware of its existence. So long as users respect Cuban law, it is permitted.

The service is more or less self-governed by volunteer administrators to make sure everything is on the up and up. Its users aren’t allowed to share pornography, discuss politics or link to the real Internet. Those that don’t abide by the rules are banned from the network.

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This makes me think of the early days of the internet; Simpler, free, fresh, Non-commercialized, non-litigious. Days long gone...
 
"Its users aren’t allowed to share pornography, discuss politics or link to the real Internet. Those that don’t abide by the rules are banned from the network."

Lame. Not free at all then. Sounds like you better run TOR and can't believe someone there has not routed up to the "real Internet".
 
In its absence, however, young Cubans have come up with their own solution. Since 2001, these rebels have created a homegrown version of the Internet called SNet, short for streetnet.

I have a better solution for them: they should band together and try to overthrow this damn lousy communist regime! And to those living in Cuba who are reading this right now, get off your *** and do something about it instead of complaining of oppression!
 
Compared with some of the junk and trash on our own Internet, S-net sounds more organized and a lot less exploited than our world wide web! Certainly sounds like the early days of Apple Talk and ISDN (the origional one, not the 2nd one) when it was strictly between universities and wasn't slowed so badly by all the graphic junk .... LOL
 
I have a better solution for them: they should band together and try to overthrow this damn lousy communist regime! And to those living in Cuba who are reading this right now, get off your *** and do something about it instead of complaining of oppression!
Said, "brave sir guest", who likely wouldn't get a scratch in the revolution, let alone get shot down dead in the streets of Havana.

Sure, sure, "the pen is mightier than the sword". But I'd bet an AK-47 would trump your punk a** keyboard.
 
In its absence, however, young Cubans have come up with their own solution. Since 2001, these rebels have created a homegrown version of the Internet called SNet, short for streetnet.

I have a better solution for them: they should band together and try to overthrow this damn lousy communist regime! And to those living in Cuba who are reading this right now, get off your *** and do something about it instead of complaining of oppression!

I am wondering: how do you propose to do just that?
 
In its absence, however, young Cubans have come up with their own solution. Since 2001, these rebels have created a homegrown version of the Internet called SNet, short for streetnet.

I have a better solution for them: they should band together and try to overthrow this damn lousy communist regime! And to those living in Cuba who are reading this right now, get off your *** and do something about it instead of complaining of oppression!

The Cubans are quite happy to not be a colony of the US.
 
Places like China and Cuba have to have restrictions on the internet because the US spends a fortune on subverting other countries around the world, interfering in politics, funding criminals and supplying weapons and drugs. If the thieving sociopaths in the CIA and NSA stopped playing their obsolete games the world wouldn't have to spend so much time and money blocking and killing them.
 
Places like China and Cuba have to have restrictions on the internet because the US spends a fortune on subverting other countries around the world, interfering in politics, funding criminals and supplying weapons and drugs. If the thieving sociopaths in the CIA and NSA stopped playing their obsolete games the world wouldn't have to spend so much time and money blocking and killing them.
Judging by your avatar, I take it that everything is honky dory in Transylvania?

And really, tons more drugs are coming into the US.from Afghanistan, Columbia, Mexico, etc., etc., than are leaving to fund, "world colonization".

We no longer have the need for, "Imperialist policies", most of the world's, "wretched refuse from their teeming shores", comes here illegally, then starts sucking up US social entitlements.

Of course there are those who stay home, join Techspot", and rant about nonsense they really know nothing about.
 
Now THIS you definitely made up. And newsflash: There are no U.S. "colonies".
Part of the formative posts of a rookie troll, involve knowing absolutely nothing regarding the topic, yet proceeding to annoy everyone by posting anyway.
 
I knew about China's restrictions, but Cuba...
Nevertheless, I think it's a kind of adventure for youngsters there! Pros are obvious.
 
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