Free hotspots According to statista.com, in the year 2022, there are approximately 550 million free Wi-Fi hotspots around the world. The
U.S. NSA warns against connecting to free public Wi-Fi. Free hotspots operate in two ways: • Using an open public network is the easiest way to create a free hotspot. All that is needed is a Wi-Fi router. Similarly, when users of private wireless routers turn off their authentication requirements, opening their connection, intentionally or not, they permit
piggybacking (sharing) by anyone in range. • Closed public networks use a HotSpot Management System to control access to hotspots. This software runs on the router itself or an external computer allowing operators to authorize only specific users to access the Internet. Providers of such hotspots often associate the free access with a menu, membership, or purchase limit. Operators may also limit each user's available
bandwidth (upload and download speed) to ensure that everyone gets a good quality service. Often this is done through
service-level agreements.
Commercial hotspots A commercial hotspot may feature: • A
captive portal / login screen / splash page that users are redirected to for
authentication and/or
payment. The captive portal / splash page sometimes includes the
social login buttons. • A payment option using a
credit card,
iPass,
PayPal, or another payment service (voucher-based Wi-Fi) • A
walled garden feature that allows free access to certain sites •
Service-oriented provisioning to allow for improved revenue • Data analytics and data capture tools, to analyze and export data from Wi-Fi clients Many services provide payment services to hotspot providers, for a monthly fee or commission from the end-user income. For example,
Amazingports can be used to set up hotspots that intend to offer both fee-based and free internet access, and
ZoneCD is a
Linux distribution that provides payment services for hotspot providers who wish to deploy their own service.
Roaming services are expanding among major hotspot
service providers. With roaming service the users of a commercial provider can have access to other providers' hotspots, either free of charge or for extra fees, which users will usually be charged on an access-per-minute basis.
Software hotspots Many Wi-Fi adapters built into or easily added to consumer computers and mobile devices include the functionality to operate as private or mobile hotspots, sometimes referred to as "mi-fi". The use of a private hotspot to enable other personal devices to access the
WAN (usually but not always the
Internet) is a form of
bridging, and known as tethering. Manufacturers and
firmware creators can enable this functionality in Wi-Fi devices on many Wi-Fi devices, depending upon the capabilities of the hardware, and most modern consumer operating systems, including
Android,
Apple OS X 10.6 and later,
Windows, and
Linux include features to support this. Additionally wireless chipset manufacturers such as
Atheros,
Broadcom,
Intel and others, may add the capability for certain Wi-Fi
NICs, usually used in a client role, to also be used for hotspot purposes. However, some service providers, such as AT&T, Sprint, and T-Mobile charge users for this service or prohibit and disconnect user connections if tethering is detected. Third-party software vendors offer applications to allow users to operate their own hotspot, whether to access the Internet when on the go, share an existing connection, or extend the range of another hotspot.
Hotspot 2.0 Hotspot 2.0, also known as HS2 and Wi-Fi Certified Passpoint, is an approach to public access Wi-Fi by the
Wi-Fi Alliance. The idea is for mobile devices to automatically join a Wi-Fi subscriber service whenever the user enters a Hotspot 2.0 area, in order to provide better bandwidth and services-on-demand to end-users and relieve carrier infrastructure of some traffic. Hotspot 2.0 is based on the
IEEE 802.11u standard, which is a set of protocols published in 2011 to enable cellular-like roaming. If the device supports 802.11u and is subscribed to a Hotspot 2.0 service it will automatically connect and roam.
Supported devices • Apple mobile devices running
iOS 7 and up • Some
Samsung Galaxy smartphones •
Windows 10 devices have full support for network discovery and connection. • Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 lack network discovery, but support connecting to a network when the credentials are known. ==Billing==