How can it be theft of service when they can deny you service at any time automatically by identifying abnormally heavy users and removing them?
This isn't like bypassing the electrical grid by running your own line from somebody else's service.
This is like saying it's theft of service to read a chapter in the bookstore. If you hang out there all day, you might get kicked out, but that's not a crime.
The courts might agree with you, but only because "computers are hard".
There's a world of difference between tunneling over DNS and compromising servers. Or at least, there should be.
"by identifying abnormally heavy users and removing them" - That costs money, ergo, theft. It's like if someone had to hire a security guard for a vending machine.
Or even just let those users alone. Users aren't stealing service if it's not even the same service. It's much slower than buying wifi from the captive portal.
DNS tunnelling is not fast or convenient. Places deploying captive portals have probably looked at the risk to their business from it and have decided not to worry about it.
I can't believe that using a slow DNS connection, intentionally made public, to tunnel traffic would be considered theft or criminal.
How many free samples do I have to eat before I'm a theif? I don't believe I'm a thief until the offer for free samples is rescinded.
Opinion differs, but many ad-supported sites would say yes. I'm not sure if it has every been tested in court. "Fare dodging" might be a better concept to compare this to.
This isn't like bypassing the electrical grid by running your own line from somebody else's service.
This is like saying it's theft of service to read a chapter in the bookstore. If you hang out there all day, you might get kicked out, but that's not a crime.
The courts might agree with you, but only because "computers are hard".
There's a world of difference between tunneling over DNS and compromising servers. Or at least, there should be.