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Wikipedia

LinkNYC

LinkNYC is the New York City branch of an international infrastructure project to create a network covering several cities with free Wi-Fi service. The office of New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the plan on November 17, 2014, and the installation of the first kiosks, or "Links," started in late 2015. The Links replace the city's network of 9,000 to 13,000 payphones, a contract for which expired in October 2014. The LinkNYC kiosks were devised after the government of New York City held several competitions to replace the payphone system. The most recent competition, in 2014, resulted in the contract being awarded to the CityBridge consortium, which comprises Qualcomm; Titan and Control Group, which now make up Intersection; and Comark.

LinkNYC
A Link at Third Avenue and 16th Street in Manhattan
FoundedNovember 7, 2014; 9 years ago (2014-11-07)
HeadquartersNew York City, New York, U.S.
Area served
New York metropolitan area
BrandsLinkNYC
ServicesWireless communication
OwnerIntersection (CityBridge consortium)
Qualcomm
CIVIQ Smartscapes
Websitelink.nyc

All of the 9.5-foot-tall (2.9 m) Links feature two 55-inch (140 cm) high-definition displays on their sides; Android tablet computers for accessing city maps, directions, and services, and making video calls; two free USB charging stations for smartphones; and a phone allowing free calls to all 50 states and Washington, D.C. The Links also provide the ability to use calling cards to make international calls, and each Link has one button to call 9-1-1 directly. Since 2022, CityBridge has also installed 32-foot-tall (9.8 m) poles under the Link5G brand, which provide both Wi-Fi and 5G service.

The project brings free, encrypted, gigabit wireless internet coverage to the five boroughs by converting old payphones into Wi-Fi hotspots where free phone calls could also be made. As of 2020, there are 1,869 Links citywide; eventually, 7,500 Links are planned to be installed in the New York metropolitan area, making the system the world's fastest and most expansive. Intersection has also installed InLinks in cities across the UK. The Links are seen as a model for future city builds as part of smart city data pools and infrastructure.

Since the Links' deployment, there have been several concerns about the kiosks' features. Privacy advocates have stated that the data of LinkNYC users can be collected and used to track users' movements throughout the city. There are also concerns with cybercriminals possibly hijacking the Links, or renaming their personal wireless networks to the same name as LinkNYC's network, in order to steal LinkNYC users' data. In addition, prior to September 2016, the tablets of the Links could be used to browse the Internet. In summer 2016, concerns arose about the Link tablets' browsers being used for illicit purposes; despite the implementation of content filters on the kiosks, the illicit activities continued, and the browsers were disabled.

History edit

Payphones and plans for reuse edit

 
One of New York City's 9,000 to 13,000 dated payphones at the Myrtle–Willoughby Avenues subway station

In 1999, thirteen companies signed a contract that legally obligated them to maintain New York City's payphones for fifteen years.[1] In 2000, the city's tens of thousands of payphones were among the 2.2 million payphones spread across the United States.[2] Since then, these payphones' use had been declining with the advent of cellphones.[1] As of July 2012, there were 13,000 phones in over 10,000 individual locations;[1] that number had dropped to 9,133 phones in 7,302 locations by April 2014,[3] at a time when the number of payphones in the United States had declined more than 75 percent, to 500,000.[2] The contract with the thirteen payphone operators was set to expire in October 2014, after which time the payphones' futures were unknown.[1][3]

In July 2012, the New York City government released a public request for information, asking for comments about the future uses for these payphones.[1] The RFI presented questions such as "What alternative communications amenities would fill a need?"; "If retained, should the current designs of sidewalk payphone enclosures be substantially revised?"; and "Should the current number of payphones on City sidewalks change, and if so, how?".[1] Through the RFI, the New York City government sought new uses for the payphones, including a combination of "public wireless hotspots, touch-screen wayfinding panels, information kiosks, charging stations for mobile communications devices, [and] electronic community bulletin boards,"[1] all of which eventually became the features of the kiosks that were included in the LinkNYC proposal.[2][4][5]

In 2013, a year before the payphone contract was set to expire, there was a competition that sought ideas to further repurpose the network of payphones.[6] The competition, held by the administration of Michael Bloomberg, expanded the idea of the pilot project.[6] There were 125 responses that suggested a Wi-Fi network, but none of these responses elaborated on how that would be accomplished.[7][8]

Previous free Wi-Fi projects edit

In 2012, the government of New York City installed Wi-Fi routers at 10 payphones in the city (seven in Manhattan, two in Brooklyn, and one in Queens[9]) as part of a pilot project. The Wi-Fi was free of charge and available for use at all times.[6][9] The Wi-Fi signal was detectable from a radius of a few hundred feet (about 100m). Two of New York City's largest advertising companies—Van Wagner and Titan, who collectively owned more than 9,000 of New York City's 12,000 payphones at the time—paid $2,000 per router,[6] with no monetary input from either the city or taxpayers.[9] While the payphones participating in the Wi-Fi pilot project were poorly marked, the Wi-Fi offered at these payphones was significantly faster than some of the other free public Wi-Fi networks offered elsewhere.[9]

The Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem received free Wi-Fi starting in late 2013.[10] Routers were installed in three phases within a 95-block area between 110th Street, Frederick Douglass Boulevard, 138th Street, and Madison Avenue. Phase 1, from 110th to 120th Streets, finished in 2013; Phase 2, from 121st to 126th Street, was expected to be complete in February 2014; and Phase 3, the remaining area, was supposed to be finished by May 2014.[10] The network was estimated to serve 80,000 Harlemites, including 13,000 in public housing projects[10] who may have otherwise not had broadband internet access at home.[11][12] At the time, it was dubbed the United States' most expansive "continuous free public Wi-Fi network."[10]

Bids edit

 
A historical overview of entities involved in the LinkNYC project

On April 30, 2014, the New York City Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications (DOITT) requested proposals for how to convert the city's over 7,000 payphones into a citywide Wi-Fi network.[7][8] A new competition was held, with the winner standing to receive a 12-year contract to maintain up to 10,000 communication points.[7][8][13] The communication points would tentatively have free Wi-Fi service, advertising, and free calls to at least 9-1-1 (the emergency service) or 3-1-1 (the city information hotline).[2][3]

The contract would require the operator, or the operating consortium, to pay "$17.5 million or 50 percent of gross revenues, whichever is greater" to the City of New York every year. The communication points could be up to 10 ft 3 in (3.12 m) tall, compared to the 7 ft 6 in (2.29 m) height of the phone booths; however, the advertising space on these points would only be allowed to accommodate up to 21.3 square feet (1.98 m2) of advertisements, or roughly half the maximum of 41.6 square feet (3.86 m2) of the advertising space allowed on existing phone booths.[3] There would still need to be phone service at these Links because the payphones are still used often: collectively, all of New York City's nearly 12,000 payphones were used 27 million times in 2011, amounting to each phone being used about 6 times per day.[1]

In November 2014, the bid was awarded to the consortium CityBridge, which consists of Qualcomm, Titan, Control Group, and Comark.[2][13][14][15][16] In June 2015, Control Group and Titan announced that they would merge into one company called Intersection. Intersection is being led by a Sidewalk Labs-led group of investors who operate the company as a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc. that focuses on solving problems unique to urban environments.[17][18][19] Daniel L. Doctoroff, the former CEO of Bloomberg L.P. and former New York City Deputy Mayor for Economic Development and Rebuilding, is the CEO of Sidewalk Labs.[20]

Installation of kiosks edit

Initial kiosks edit

 
Link installation

CityBridge announced that it would be setting up about 7,000 kiosks, called "Links," near where guests could use the LinkNYC Wi-Fi. Coverage was set to be up by late 2015, starting with about 500 Links in areas that already have payphones, and later to other areas.[21] These Links were to be placed online by the end of the year.[16] The project would require the installation of 400 miles (640 km) of new communication cables.[4] The Links would be built in coordination with borough presidents, business improvement districts, the New York City Council, and New York City community boards.[14] The project is expected to create up to 800 jobs, including 100 to 150 full-time jobs at CityBridge as well as 650 technical support positions.[2][14] Of the LinkNYC plans, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said,

With this proposal for the fastest and largest municipal Wi-Fi network in the world – accessible to and free for all New Yorkers and visitors alike – we're taking a critical step toward a more equal, open and connected city – for every New Yorker, in every borough.[14]

In December 2014, the network was approved by New York City's Franchise and Concession Review Committee.[22] Installation of two stations on Third Avenue—at 15th and 17th Streets[23]—began on December 28, 2015,[24] followed by other Links on Third Avenue below 58th Street,[25][26] as well as on Eighth Avenue.[26] After some delays, the first Links went online in January 2016.[5][25][27] The public network was announced in February 2016.[28] Locations like St. George, Jamaica, South Bronx, and Flatbush Avenue were prioritized for LinkNYC kiosk installations, with these places receiving Links by the end of 2016.[28]

The vast majority of the payphones were to be demolished and replaced with Links.[2][25][26][28] However, three[2][4][13] or four[29] banks of payphones along West End Avenue in the Upper West Side are expected to be preserved rather than being replaced with Links.[2][4][13][29] These payphones are the only remaining fully enclosed payphones in Manhattan.[29][30] The preservation process includes creating new fully enclosed booths for the site, which is a difficulty because that specific model of phone booths is no longer manufactured.[29] The New York City government and Intersection agreed to preserve these payphones because of their historical value, and because they were a relic of the Upper West Side community, having been featured in the 2002 movie Phone Booth and the 2010 book "The Lonely Phone Booth."[29]

Expansion and issues edit

By mid-July 2016, the planned roll-out of 500 hubs throughout New York City was to occur,[27] though the actual installation proceeded at a slower rate.[31] As of September 2016, there were 400 hubs in three boroughs,[31] most of which were in Manhattan, although there were at least 25 hubs in the Bronx and several additional hubs in Queens.[32] In November 2016, the first two Links were installed in Brooklyn, with plans to install nine more Links in various places around Brooklyn before year's end.[33] Around this time, Staten Island received its first Links, which were installed in New Dorp.[33] The Links were being installed at an average pace of ten per day throughout the boroughs[26] with a projected goal of 500 hubs by the end of 2016.[25] By July 2017, there were 920 Links installed across the city.[34] This number had increased to 1,250 by January 2018,[35] and to 1,600 by September 2018.[36]

As originally planned, there would be 4,550 hubs by July 2019[37] and 7,500 hubs by 2024,[25][26][28] which would make LinkNYC the largest and fastest public, government-operated Wi-Fi network in the world.[2][7][13][14][23] Slightly more than half, or 52%, of the hubs would be in Manhattan and the rest would be in the outer boroughs.[26] There would be capacity for up to 10,000 Links within the network, as per the contract.[13][16][28] The total cost for installation is estimated at more than $200 million.[25][26] The eventual network includes 736 Links in the Bronx, 361 of which will have advertising and fast network speeds; as well as over 2,500 in Manhattan, most with advertising and fast network speeds.[38] By December 2019, only 1,774 LinkNYC kiosks had been installed across the city; the kiosks were largely concentrated in wealthy neighborhoods Manhattan, although Harlem, the South Bronx, and Queens also had several kiosks.[39]

CityBridge had installed 1,869 kiosks by May 2020.[40] Most of the kiosks were in Manhattan. CityBridge had only provided three-fifths the number of kiosks that it had been expected to provide by that time.[40][41] New York state comptroller Thomas DiNapoli released a report in 2021, finding that 86 of the city's 185 ZIP Codes had kiosks; Manhattan was the only borough that had LinkNYC kiosks in the vast majority of its ZIP Codes.[40]

Implementation of 5G poles edit

 
A Link5G pole in Brooklyn

In October 2021, CityBridge submitted designs to the New York City Public Design Commission for the installation of 32-foot-tall (9.8 m) poles, capable of transmitting 5G wireless signals, under the Link5G brand.[42] The Public Design Commission initially only approved the construction of Link5G poles in commercial and industrial neighborhoods.[42][43] The first such pole was installed at the intersection of Hunters Point Avenue and 30th Place in Long Island City, Queens, in March 2022 and was used for testing.[44] As part of an agreement with the city government, over 2,000 poles were to be installed in portions of the city that lacked reliable internet service.[41][45] Under the agreement with CityBridge, the city would receive eight percent of the first $200 million in profits from the Link5G project, as well as half of all revenue above $200 million.[41] The first publicly accessible pole was installed in Morris Heights, Bronx, in July 2022.[43][46] By the end of the year, CityBridge had installed 26 Link5G poles citywide.[47]

As additional poles were rolled out across the city in 2023, many residents expressed concerns about the Link5G poles' appearance and height; some opponents also cited misinformation related to 5G technology.[48][49] Neighborhoods such as the West Village[50] and the Upper East Side passed regulations opposing the Link5G poles.[48] Conversely, city officials and businesses supported the installation of the poles.[49] Following a letter from U.S. representative Jerrold Nadler,[51] the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ruled in April 2023 that the poles needed to undergo environmental and historic-preservation reviews.[52][53]

Description edit

Links edit

The Links are 9.5 feet (2.9 m) tall, and are compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.[14][25] There are two 55-inch (140 cm) high-definition displays on each Link[2][4][24][54] for advertisements[2][15][16][21] and public service announcements.[2][5] There is an integrated Android tablet embedded within each Link, which can be used to access city maps, directions, and services, as well as make video calls;[2][4][5] they were formerly also available to allow patrons to use the internet, but these browsers have now been disabled due to abuse (see below).[31]

 
Tablet with keypad, 9-1-1 button, and headphone jack

Each Link includes two free USB charging stations for smartphones as well as a phone that allows free calls to all 50 states and to Washington, D.C.[36] The Links allow people to make either phone calls (using the keypad and the headphone jack to the keypad's left), or video calls (using the tablet).[2][4][5][26] Vonage provides this free domestic phone call service as well as the ability to make international calls using calling cards.[20] The Links feature a red 9-1-1 call button between the tablet and the headphone jack,[4][55] and they can be used to call the information helpline 3-1-1.[4][14][55]

The Links can be used for completing simple time-specific tasks[35] such as registering to vote.[56] In April 2017, the Links were equipped with another app, Aunt Bertha, which could be utilized to find social services such as food pantries, financial aid, and emergency shelter.[57] The Links sometimes offer eccentric apps, such as an app to call Santa's voice mail that was enabled in December 2017.[35] In October 2019, a video relay service for deaf users was added to the Links.[58]

The Wi-Fi technology comes from Ruckus Wireless and is enabled by Qualcomm's Vive 802.11ac Wave 2 4x4 chipsets.[5] The Links' operating system runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor and the Adreno 320 graphics processing unit.[54] The Links' hardware and software can handle future upgrades. The software will be updated until at least 2022, but Qualcomm has promised to maintain the Links for the rest of their service lives.[54]

Links are cleaned twice weekly, with LinkNYC staff removing vandalism and dirt from the Links. Each Link has cameras and over 30 vibration sensors to sense if the kiosk has been hit by an object.[26][59] A separate set of sensors also detects if the USB ports are tampered with.[59] If either the vibration sensors or the USB port sensors detect tampering, an alert is displayed at LinkNYC headquarters that the specific part of the Link has been affected.[59] All of the Links have a backup battery power supply that can last for up to 24 hours if a long-term power outage were to occur.[28] This was added to prevent interruption of phone service, as happened in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in 2012, which caused power outages citywide, especially to the city's payphones (which were connected to the municipal power supply of New York City).[2] Antenna Design helped with the overall design of the kiosks,[14][16] which are produced by Comark subsidiary Civiq.[4][60]

Advertising screens edit

 
A LinkNYC kiosk at 23rd Street and Eighth Avenue, with side advertising panel

New York City does not pay for the system because CityBridge oversees the installation, ownership, and operations, and is responsible for building the new optic infrastructure under the streets.[61] CityBridge stated in a press release that the network would be free for all users, and that the service would be funded by advertisements.[2][15][16][21] This advertising will provide revenue for New York City as well as for the partners involved in CityBridge.[61]

The advertising is estimated to bring in over $1 billion in revenue over twelve years, with the City of New York receiving over $500 million, or about half of that amount.[25][26] Technically, the LinkNYC network is intended to act as a public internet utility with advertising services.[4] However, in four of the first five years the Links have been active, actual revenue fell short of goals. This is partially due to the fact that some local small businesses and non-profits were given advertisement space for free.[62]

The Links' advertising screens also display "NYC Fun Facts", one-sentence factoids about New York City, as well as "This Day in New York" facts and historic photographs of the city, which are shown between advertisements.[35][63] In April 2018, some advertising screens started displaying real-time bus arrival information for nearby bus routes, using data from the MTA Bus Time system.[64][65] Other things displayed on Links include headlines from the Associated Press, as well as weather information, comics, contests, and "content collaborations" where third-party organizations display their own information.[63]

Links in some areas, especially lower-income and lower-traffic areas, are expected to not display advertisements because it is not worthwhile for CityBridge to advertise in these areas.[38] Controversially, the Links that lack advertising are expected to exhibit network speeds that may be as slow as one-tenth of the network speeds of advertisement-enabled Links. As of 2014, wealthier neighborhoods in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens were expected to have the most Links with advertisements and fast network speeds, while poorer neighborhoods and Staten Island would get slower Links with no advertising.[38] CityBridge sold fewer advertisements than expected, and it defaulted on $70 million owed to the city in July 2021.[40][66]

5G poles edit

CityBridge began installing Link5G poles across the city in 2022. Each pole measures 32 feet (9.8 m) tall, more than three times as high as the original kiosks;[41][45] the FCC had mandated that the poles be at least 19.5 feet (5.9 m) high.[67] In contrast to the kiosks, the Link5G poles were supposed to be installed in neighborhoods without good internet service; ninety percent of the poles were to be placed in the outer boroughs or in Upper Manhattan north of 96th Street.[68]

The lower sections of many of the poles have tablets, USB charging ports, 9-1-1 call buttons, and advertising displays, similar to the original kiosks. The upper portions of each pole contain 5G equipment installed by telecommunications companies, which can rent space within the poles from CityBridge.[41] The 5G antennas measure 63 inches (1,600 mm) tall and 21 feet (6.4 m) across. Next to each antenna is a box measuring 38 by 16 by 14 inches (970 by 410 by 360 mm).[45] There are five transmitters atop each pole, measuring at least 29 inches (740 mm) tall.[67] Although Wi-Fi service from the 5G poles is provided free of charge, users have to pay their telecom companies to receive 5G service.[41] The poles also have cameras on them, but the cameras are not operational at all times.[43][68]

Network edit

According to its specifications, the Links' Wi-Fi will cover a radius of 150 feet (46 m)[4][5][7][16][21] to 400 feet (120 m).[4][23][26] The Links' Wi-Fi is capable of running at 1 gigabit per second or 1000 megabits per second,[2][16][21][23] more than 100 times faster than the 8.7 megabit per second speed of the average public Wi-Fi network in the United States.[23][26] LinkNYC's routers have neither a bandwidth cap nor a time limit for usage, meaning that users can use LinkNYC Wi-Fi for as long as they need to.[26] The free phone calls are also available for unlimited use.[26] The network is only intended for use in public spaces,[26] though this may be subject to change in the future.[4] In the future, the LinkNYC network could also be used to "connect lighting systems, smart meters, traffic networks, connected cameras and other IoT systems,"[54] as well as for utility monitoring and for 5G installations.[4]

CityBridge emphasized that it takes security and privacy seriously "and will never sell any personally identifiable information or share with third parties for their own use".[15]: 2  Aside from the unsecured network that devices can directly connect to, the Links provide an encrypted network that shields communications from eavesdropping within the network. There are two types of networks: a private (secured WPA/WPA2) network called "LinkNYC Private," which is available to iOS devices with iOS 7 and above; and a public network called "LinkNYC Free Public Wi-Fi," which is available to all devices but is only protected by the device's browser.[69][70]

Private network users will have to accept a network key in order to log onto the LinkNYC Wi-Fi.[59][70] This would make New York City one of the first American municipalities to have a free, encrypted Wi-Fi network,[16] as well as North America's largest.[4] LinkNYC would also be the fastest citywide ISP in the world, with download and upload speeds between 15 and 32 times faster than on free networks at Starbucks, in LaGuardia Airport, and within New York City hotels.[70]

 
A Link advertising phone charging at the kiosk

Originally, the CityBridge consortium was supposed to include Transit Wireless, which maintains the New York City Subway's wireless system.[14] However, as neither company mentioned each other on their respective websites, one communications writer speculated that the deal had either not been implemented yet or had fallen through. Transit Wireless stated that "those details have not been finalized yet", and CityBridge "promised to let [the writer] know when more information is available."[16]

The network is extremely popular, and by September 2016, around 450,000 unique users and over 1 million devices connected to the Links in an average week.[71] The Links had been used a total of more than 21 million times by that date.[72] This had risen to over 576,000 unique users by October 4,[56] with 21,000 phone calls made in the previous week alone.[73] By January 2018, the number of calls registered by the LinkNYC system had risen to 200,000 per month, or 50,000 per week on average. There were also 600,000 unique users connecting to the Links' Wi-Fi or cellular services each week.[35] The LinkNYC network exceeded 500,000 average monthly calls, 1 billion total sessions, and 5 million monthly users in September 2018.[36]

One writer for the Motherboard website observed that the LinkNYC network also helped connect poor communities, as people from these communities come to congregate at the Links.[74] This stems from the fact that the network provides service to all New Yorkers regardless of income, but it especially helps residents who would have otherwise used their smartphones for internet access using 3G and 4G.[28] The New York City Bureau of Policy and Research published a report in 2015 that stated that one-fourth of residents do not have home broadband internet access, including 32 percent of unemployed residents.[12]

As of January 2018, the most-dialed number on the LinkNYC network was the helpline for the state's electronic benefit transfer system, which distributes food stamps to low-income residents.[35] The LinkNYC network is seen as only somewhat mitigating this internet inequality, as many poor neighborhoods, like some in the Bronx, will get relatively few Links.[74] LinkNYC is seen as an example of smart city infrastructure in New York City, as it is a technologically advanced system that helps enable technological connectivity.[4][74]

Concerns edit

Tracking edit

The deployment of the Links and the method, process, eventual selection, and ownership of entities involved in the project has come under scrutiny by privacy advocates, who express concerns about the terms of service, the financial model, and the collection of end users' data.[60][75][76][77] These concerns are aggravated by the involvement of Sidewalk Labs, which belongs to Google's holding company, Alphabet Inc.[60] Google already has the ability to track the majority of all website visits,[78] and LinkNYC could be used to track people's movements.[60] Nick Pinto of the Village Voice, a Lower Manhattan newspaper, wrote:

Google is in the business of taking as much information as it can get away with, from as many sources as possible, until someone steps in to stop it. ... But LinkNYC marks a radical step even for Google. It is an effort to establish a permanent presence across our city, block by block, and to extend its online model to the physical landscape we humans occupy on a daily basis. The company then intends to clone that system and start selling it around the world, government by government, to as many as will buy.[60]

 
A newly installed Link

In March 2016, the New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU), the New York City office of the American Civil Liberties Union, wrote a letter to Mayor de Blasio outlining their privacy concerns.[76][77] In the letter, representatives for the NYCLU wrote that CityBridge could be retaining too much information about LinkNYC users. They also stated that the privacy policy was vague and needed to be clarified. They recommended that the privacy policy be rewritten so that it expressly mentions whether the Links' environmental sensors or cameras are being used by the NYPD for surveillance or by other city systems.[76] In response, LinkNYC updated its privacy policy to make clear that the kiosks do not store users' browsing history or track the websites visited while using LinkNYC's Wi-Fi,[79] a step that NYCLU commended.[80]

In an unrelated incident, Titan, one of the members of CityBridge, was accused of embedding Bluetooth radio transmitters in their phones, which could be used to track phone users' movements without their consent.[61][81] These beacons were later found to have been permitted by the DOITT, but "without any public notice, consultation, or approval", so they were removed in October 2014.[61] Despite the removal of the transmitters, Titan is proposing putting similar tracking devices on Links, but if the company decides to go through with the plan, it has to notify the public in advance.[61]

In 2018, a New York City College of Technology undergraduate student, Charles Myers, found that LinkNYC had published folders on GitHub titled "LinkNYC Mobile Observation" and "RxLocation". He shared these with The Intercept website, which wrote that the folders indicated that identifiable user data was being collected, including information on the user's coordinates, web browser, operating system, and device details, among other things. However, LinkNYC disputed these claims and filed a Digital Millennium Copyright Act claim to force GitHub to remove files containing code that Meyer had copied from LinkNYC's GitHub account.[82]

Other privacy issues edit

According to LinkNYC, it does not monitor its kiosks' Wi-Fi, nor does it give information to third parties.[26] However, data will be given to law enforcement officials in situations where LinkNYC is legally obliged.[23][77] Its privacy policy states that it can collect personally identifiable information (PII) from users to give to "service providers, and sub-contractors to the extent reasonably necessary to enable us provide the Services; a third party that acquires CityBridge or a majority of its assets [if CityBridge was acquired by that third party]; a third party with whom we must legally share information about you; you, upon your request; [and] other third parties with your express consent to do so."[83] Non-personally identifiable information can be shared with service providers and advertisers.[2][83] The privacy policy also states that "in the event that we receive a request from a governmental entity to provide it with your Personally [sic] Information, we will take reasonable attempts to notify you of such request, to the extent possible."[26][83]

There are also concerns that despite the WPA/WPA2 encryption, hackers may still be able to steal other users' data, especially since the LinkNYC Wi-Fi network has millions of users. To reduce the risk of data theft, LinkNYC is deploying a better encryption system for devices that have Hotspot 2.0.[26][28] Another concern is that hackers could affect the tablet itself by redirecting it to a malware site when users put in PII, or adding a keystroke logging program to the tablets.[59] To protect against this, CityBridge places in "a series of filters and proxies" that prevents malware from being installed; ends a session when a tablet is detected communicating with a command-and-control server; and resets the entire kiosk after 15 seconds of inactivity.[59][69] The USB ports have been configured so that they can only be used to charge devices. However, the USB ports are still susceptible to physical tampering with skimmers, which may lead to a user's device getting a malware infection while charging; this is prevented by the more than 30 anti-vandalism sensors on each Link.[59][69]

Yet another concern is that a person may carry out a spoofing attack by renaming their personal Wi-Fi network to "LinkNYC." This is potentially dangerous since many electronic devices tend to automatically connect to networks with a given name, but do not differentiate between the different networks.[59] One reporter for The Verge suggested that to circumvent this, a person could turn off their mobile device's Wi-Fi while in the vicinity of a kiosk, or "forget" the LinkNYC network altogether.[59]

The cameras on the top of each kiosk's tablet posed a concern in some communities where these cameras face the interiors of buildings. However, as of July 2017, the cameras were not activated.[34]

Browser access and content filtering edit

 
A Link with its tablet turned off due to the screens' browsing capabilities being shut off in September 2016. Instead, the tablet shows the reflection of the street scene in the background.

In the summer of 2016, a content filter was set up on the Links to restrict navigation to certain websites, such as pornography sites and other sites with not safe for work (NSFW) content.[84] This was described as a problem especially among the homeless,[85] and at least one video showed a homeless man watching pornography on a LinkNYC tablet.[84] This problem has supposedly been ongoing since at least January 2016.[85] Despite the existence of the filter, Link users still found a way to bypass these filters.[69][71][86][87]

The filters, which consisted of Google SafeSearch as well as a web blocker that was based on the web blockers of many schools, were intentionally lax to begin with because LinkNYC feared that stricter filters that blocked certain keywords would alienate customers.[87] Other challenges included the fact that "stimulating" user-generated content can be found on popular, relatively interactive websites like Tumblr and YouTube; it is hard to block NSFW content on these sites, because that would entail blocking the entire website when only a small portion hosts NSFW content. In addition, it was hard, if not impossible, for LinkNYC to block new websites with NSFW content, as such websites are constantly being created.[87]

A few days after Díaz's and Johnson's statements, the web browsers of the tablets embedded into the Links were disabled indefinitely due to concerns of illicit activities such as drug deals and NSFW website browsing.[31][88] LinkNYC cited "lewd acts" as the reason for shutting off the tables' browsing capabilities.[86] One Murray Hill resident reported that a homeless man "enthusiastically hump[ed]" a Link in her neighborhood while watching pornography.[85] Despite the tablets being disabled, the 9-1-1 capabilities, maps, and phone calls would still be usable, and people can still use LinkNYC Wi-Fi from their own devices.[72][86][88]

The disabling of the LinkNYC tablets' browsers had stoked fears about further restrictions on the Links. The Independent, a British newspaper, surveyed some homeless New Yorkers and found that while most of these homeless citizens used the kiosks for legitimate reasons (usually not to browse NSFW content), many of the interviewees were scared that LinkNYC may eventually charge money to use the internet via the Links, or that the kiosks may be demolished altogether.[89] The Guardian, another British newspaper, came to a similar conclusion; one of the LinkNYC users they interviewed said that the Links are "very helpful, but of course bad people messed it up for everyone".[90] In a press release, LinkNYC refuted fears that service would be paywalled or eliminated, though it did state that several improvements, including dimming the kiosks and lowering maximum volumes, were being implemented to reduce the kiosks' effect on the surrounding communities.[72]

Immediately after the disabling of the tablets' browsing capabilities, reports of loitering near kiosks decreased by more than 80%.[56][73] By the next year, such complaints had dropped 96% from the pre-September 2016 figure.[91] The tablets' use, as a whole, has increased 12%, with more unique users accessing maps, phone calls, and 3-1-1.[56][73]

Nuisance complaints edit

There have been scattered complaints in some communities that the LinkNYC towers themselves are a nuisance. These complaints mainly have to do with loitering, browser access, and kiosk volume, the latter two of which the city has resolved.[34] However, these nuisance complaints are rare citywide; of the 920 kiosks installed citywide by then, there had been only one complaint relating to the kiosk design itself.[34]

In September 2016, the borough president of the Bronx, Rubén Díaz Jr., called on city leaders to take stricter action, saying that "after learning about the inappropriate and over-extended usage of Links throughout the city, in particular in Manhattan, it is time to make adjustments that will allow all of our city residents to use this service safely and comfortably."[71] City Councilman Corey Johnson said that some police officials had called for several Links in Chelsea to be removed because homeless men had been watching NSFW content on these Links while children were nearby.[31][92] Barbara A. Blair, president of the Garment District Alliance, stated that "people are congregating around these Links to the point where they're bringing furniture and building little encampments clustered around them. It's created this really unfortunate and actually deplorable condition."[31]

A related problem arising from the tablets' browser access was that even though the tablets were intended for people to use it for a short period of time, the Links began being "monopolized" almost as soon as they were unveiled.[71] Some people would use the Links for hours at a time.[31] Particularly, homeless New Yorkers would sometimes loiter around the Links, using newspaper dispensers and milk crates as "makeshift furniture" on which they could sit while using the Links.[31][74][92] The New York Post characterized the Links as having become "living rooms for vagrants".[93] As a result, LinkNYC staff were working on a way to help ensure that Links would not be monopolized by one or two people.[71][72] Proposals for solutions included putting time limits on how long the tablets could be used by any one person.[94]

Some people stated that the Links could also be used for loitering and illicit phone calls.[92][95] One Hell's Kitchen bar owner cited concerns about the users of a Link located right outside his bar, including a homeless man who a patron complained was a "creeper" watching animal pornography, as well as several people who made drug deals using the Link's phone capabilities while families were nearby.[95] In Greenpoint, locals alleged that after Links were activated in their neighborhood in July 2017, these particular kiosks became locations for drug deals; however, that particular Link was installed near a known drug den.[91]

Wider deployment edit

Intersection, in collaboration with British telecommunications company BT and British advertising agency Primesight, is also planning to install up to 850 Links in the United Kingdom, including in London, beginning in 2017. The LinkUK kiosks, as they will be called, are similar to the LinkNYC kiosks in New York City. These Links will replace some of London's iconic telephone booths due to these booths' age.[96][97][98] The first hundred Links would be installed in the borough of Camden.[96] The Links will have tablets, but they will lack web browsing capabilities due to the problems that LinkNYC faced in enabling the tablet browsers.[99][100]

In early 2016, Intersection announced that it could install about 100 Links in a mid-sized city in the United States, provided that it wins the United States Department of Transportation's Smart City Challenge.[101] Approximately 25 of that city's blocks will get the Links, which will be integrated with Sidewalk Labs' transportation data-analysis initiative, Flow.[101] In summer 2016, the city of Columbus, Ohio, was announced as the winner of the Smart City Challenge.[102] Intersection has proposed installing Links in four Columbus neighborhoods.[103]

In July 2017, the city of Hoboken, New Jersey, located across the Hudson River from Manhattan, proposed adding free Wi-Fi kiosks on its busiest pedestrian corridors. The kiosks, which are also a smart-city initiative, are proposed to be installed by Intersection.[104]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website  

linknyc, york, city, branch, international, infrastructure, project, create, network, covering, several, cities, with, free, service, office, york, city, mayor, bill, blasio, announced, plan, november, 2014, installation, first, kiosks, links, started, late, 2. LinkNYC is the New York City branch of an international infrastructure project to create a network covering several cities with free Wi Fi service The office of New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the plan on November 17 2014 and the installation of the first kiosks or Links started in late 2015 The Links replace the city s network of 9 000 to 13 000 payphones a contract for which expired in October 2014 The LinkNYC kiosks were devised after the government of New York City held several competitions to replace the payphone system The most recent competition in 2014 resulted in the contract being awarded to the CityBridge consortium which comprises Qualcomm Titan and Control Group which now make up Intersection and Comark LinkNYCA Link at Third Avenue and 16th Street in ManhattanFoundedNovember 7 2014 9 years ago 2014 11 07 HeadquartersNew York City New York U S Area servedNew York metropolitan areaBrandsLinkNYCServicesWireless communicationOwnerIntersection CityBridge consortium QualcommCIVIQ SmartscapesWebsitelink wbr nycAll of the 9 5 foot tall 2 9 m Links feature two 55 inch 140 cm high definition displays on their sides Android tablet computers for accessing city maps directions and services and making video calls two free USB charging stations for smartphones and a phone allowing free calls to all 50 states and Washington D C The Links also provide the ability to use calling cards to make international calls and each Link has one button to call 9 1 1 directly Since 2022 CityBridge has also installed 32 foot tall 9 8 m poles under the Link5G brand which provide both Wi Fi and 5G service The project brings free encrypted gigabit wireless internet coverage to the five boroughs by converting old payphones into Wi Fi hotspots where free phone calls could also be made As of 2020 update there are 1 869 Links citywide eventually 7 500 Links are planned to be installed in the New York metropolitan area making the system the world s fastest and most expansive Intersection has also installed InLinks in cities across the UK The Links are seen as a model for future city builds as part of smart city data pools and infrastructure Since the Links deployment there have been several concerns about the kiosks features Privacy advocates have stated that the data of LinkNYC users can be collected and used to track users movements throughout the city There are also concerns with cybercriminals possibly hijacking the Links or renaming their personal wireless networks to the same name as LinkNYC s network in order to steal LinkNYC users data In addition prior to September 2016 the tablets of the Links could be used to browse the Internet In summer 2016 concerns arose about the Link tablets browsers being used for illicit purposes despite the implementation of content filters on the kiosks the illicit activities continued and the browsers were disabled Contents 1 History 1 1 Payphones and plans for reuse 1 2 Previous free Wi Fi projects 1 3 Bids 1 4 Installation of kiosks 1 4 1 Initial kiosks 1 4 2 Expansion and issues 1 5 Implementation of 5G poles 2 Description 2 1 Links 2 1 1 Advertising screens 2 2 5G poles 3 Network 4 Concerns 4 1 Tracking 4 2 Other privacy issues 4 3 Browser access and content filtering 4 4 Nuisance complaints 5 Wider deployment 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editPayphones and plans for reuse edit nbsp One of New York City s 9 000 to 13 000 dated payphones at the Myrtle Willoughby Avenues subway stationIn 1999 thirteen companies signed a contract that legally obligated them to maintain New York City s payphones for fifteen years 1 In 2000 the city s tens of thousands of payphones were among the 2 2 million payphones spread across the United States 2 Since then these payphones use had been declining with the advent of cellphones 1 As of July 2012 update there were 13 000 phones in over 10 000 individual locations 1 that number had dropped to 9 133 phones in 7 302 locations by April 2014 3 at a time when the number of payphones in the United States had declined more than 75 percent to 500 000 2 The contract with the thirteen payphone operators was set to expire in October 2014 after which time the payphones futures were unknown 1 3 In July 2012 the New York City government released a public request for information asking for comments about the future uses for these payphones 1 The RFI presented questions such as What alternative communications amenities would fill a need If retained should the current designs of sidewalk payphone enclosures be substantially revised and Should the current number of payphones on City sidewalks change and if so how 1 Through the RFI the New York City government sought new uses for the payphones including a combination of public wireless hotspots touch screen wayfinding panels information kiosks charging stations for mobile communications devices and electronic community bulletin boards 1 all of which eventually became the features of the kiosks that were included in the LinkNYC proposal 2 4 5 In 2013 a year before the payphone contract was set to expire there was a competition that sought ideas to further repurpose the network of payphones 6 The competition held by the administration of Michael Bloomberg expanded the idea of the pilot project 6 There were 125 responses that suggested a Wi Fi network but none of these responses elaborated on how that would be accomplished 7 8 Previous free Wi Fi projects edit In 2012 the government of New York City installed Wi Fi routers at 10 payphones in the city seven in Manhattan two in Brooklyn and one in Queens 9 as part of a pilot project The Wi Fi was free of charge and available for use at all times 6 9 The Wi Fi signal was detectable from a radius of a few hundred feet about 100m Two of New York City s largest advertising companies Van Wagner and Titan who collectively owned more than 9 000 of New York City s 12 000 payphones at the time paid 2 000 per router 6 with no monetary input from either the city or taxpayers 9 While the payphones participating in the Wi Fi pilot project were poorly marked the Wi Fi offered at these payphones was significantly faster than some of the other free public Wi Fi networks offered elsewhere 9 The Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem received free Wi Fi starting in late 2013 10 Routers were installed in three phases within a 95 block area between 110th Street Frederick Douglass Boulevard 138th Street and Madison Avenue Phase 1 from 110th to 120th Streets finished in 2013 Phase 2 from 121st to 126th Street was expected to be complete in February 2014 and Phase 3 the remaining area was supposed to be finished by May 2014 10 The network was estimated to serve 80 000 Harlemites including 13 000 in public housing projects 10 who may have otherwise not had broadband internet access at home 11 12 At the time it was dubbed the United States most expansive continuous free public Wi Fi network 10 Bids edit nbsp A historical overview of entities involved in the LinkNYC projectOn April 30 2014 the New York City Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications DOITT requested proposals for how to convert the city s over 7 000 payphones into a citywide Wi Fi network 7 8 A new competition was held with the winner standing to receive a 12 year contract to maintain up to 10 000 communication points 7 8 13 The communication points would tentatively have free Wi Fi service advertising and free calls to at least 9 1 1 the emergency service or 3 1 1 the city information hotline 2 3 The contract would require the operator or the operating consortium to pay 17 5 million or 50 percent of gross revenues whichever is greater to the City of New York every year The communication points could be up to 10 ft 3 in 3 12 m tall compared to the 7 ft 6 in 2 29 m height of the phone booths however the advertising space on these points would only be allowed to accommodate up to 21 3 square feet 1 98 m2 of advertisements or roughly half the maximum of 41 6 square feet 3 86 m2 of the advertising space allowed on existing phone booths 3 There would still need to be phone service at these Links because the payphones are still used often collectively all of New York City s nearly 12 000 payphones were used 27 million times in 2011 amounting to each phone being used about 6 times per day 1 In November 2014 the bid was awarded to the consortium CityBridge which consists of Qualcomm Titan Control Group and Comark 2 13 14 15 16 In June 2015 Control Group and Titan announced that they would merge into one company called Intersection Intersection is being led by a Sidewalk Labs led group of investors who operate the company as a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc that focuses on solving problems unique to urban environments 17 18 19 Daniel L Doctoroff the former CEO of Bloomberg L P and former New York City Deputy Mayor for Economic Development and Rebuilding is the CEO of Sidewalk Labs 20 Installation of kiosks edit Initial kiosks edit nbsp Link installationCityBridge announced that it would be setting up about 7 000 kiosks called Links near where guests could use the LinkNYC Wi Fi Coverage was set to be up by late 2015 starting with about 500 Links in areas that already have payphones and later to other areas 21 These Links were to be placed online by the end of the year 16 The project would require the installation of 400 miles 640 km of new communication cables 4 The Links would be built in coordination with borough presidents business improvement districts the New York City Council and New York City community boards 14 The project is expected to create up to 800 jobs including 100 to 150 full time jobs at CityBridge as well as 650 technical support positions 2 14 Of the LinkNYC plans New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said With this proposal for the fastest and largest municipal Wi Fi network in the world accessible to and free for all New Yorkers and visitors alike we re taking a critical step toward a more equal open and connected city for every New Yorker in every borough 14 In December 2014 the network was approved by New York City s Franchise and Concession Review Committee 22 Installation of two stations on Third Avenue at 15th and 17th Streets 23 began on December 28 2015 24 followed by other Links on Third Avenue below 58th Street 25 26 as well as on Eighth Avenue 26 After some delays the first Links went online in January 2016 5 25 27 The public network was announced in February 2016 28 Locations like St George Jamaica South Bronx and Flatbush Avenue were prioritized for LinkNYC kiosk installations with these places receiving Links by the end of 2016 28 The vast majority of the payphones were to be demolished and replaced with Links 2 25 26 28 However three 2 4 13 or four 29 banks of payphones along West End Avenue in the Upper West Side are expected to be preserved rather than being replaced with Links 2 4 13 29 These payphones are the only remaining fully enclosed payphones in Manhattan 29 30 The preservation process includes creating new fully enclosed booths for the site which is a difficulty because that specific model of phone booths is no longer manufactured 29 The New York City government and Intersection agreed to preserve these payphones because of their historical value and because they were a relic of the Upper West Side community having been featured in the 2002 movie Phone Booth and the 2010 book The Lonely Phone Booth 29 Expansion and issues edit By mid July 2016 the planned roll out of 500 hubs throughout New York City was to occur 27 though the actual installation proceeded at a slower rate 31 As of September 2016 update there were 400 hubs in three boroughs 31 most of which were in Manhattan although there were at least 25 hubs in the Bronx and several additional hubs in Queens 32 In November 2016 the first two Links were installed in Brooklyn with plans to install nine more Links in various places around Brooklyn before year s end 33 Around this time Staten Island received its first Links which were installed in New Dorp 33 The Links were being installed at an average pace of ten per day throughout the boroughs 26 with a projected goal of 500 hubs by the end of 2016 25 By July 2017 update there were 920 Links installed across the city 34 This number had increased to 1 250 by January 2018 35 and to 1 600 by September 2018 36 As originally planned there would be 4 550 hubs by July 2019 37 and 7 500 hubs by 2024 25 26 28 which would make LinkNYC the largest and fastest public government operated Wi Fi network in the world 2 7 13 14 23 Slightly more than half or 52 of the hubs would be in Manhattan and the rest would be in the outer boroughs 26 There would be capacity for up to 10 000 Links within the network as per the contract 13 16 28 The total cost for installation is estimated at more than 200 million 25 26 The eventual network includes 736 Links in the Bronx 361 of which will have advertising and fast network speeds as well as over 2 500 in Manhattan most with advertising and fast network speeds 38 By December 2019 only 1 774 LinkNYC kiosks had been installed across the city the kiosks were largely concentrated in wealthy neighborhoods Manhattan although Harlem the South Bronx and Queens also had several kiosks 39 CityBridge had installed 1 869 kiosks by May 2020 40 Most of the kiosks were in Manhattan CityBridge had only provided three fifths the number of kiosks that it had been expected to provide by that time 40 41 New York state comptroller Thomas DiNapoli released a report in 2021 finding that 86 of the city s 185 ZIP Codes had kiosks Manhattan was the only borough that had LinkNYC kiosks in the vast majority of its ZIP Codes 40 Implementation of 5G poles edit nbsp A Link5G pole in BrooklynIn October 2021 CityBridge submitted designs to the New York City Public Design Commission for the installation of 32 foot tall 9 8 m poles capable of transmitting 5G wireless signals under the Link5G brand 42 The Public Design Commission initially only approved the construction of Link5G poles in commercial and industrial neighborhoods 42 43 The first such pole was installed at the intersection of Hunters Point Avenue and 30th Place in Long Island City Queens in March 2022 and was used for testing 44 As part of an agreement with the city government over 2 000 poles were to be installed in portions of the city that lacked reliable internet service 41 45 Under the agreement with CityBridge the city would receive eight percent of the first 200 million in profits from the Link5G project as well as half of all revenue above 200 million 41 The first publicly accessible pole was installed in Morris Heights Bronx in July 2022 43 46 By the end of the year CityBridge had installed 26 Link5G poles citywide 47 As additional poles were rolled out across the city in 2023 many residents expressed concerns about the Link5G poles appearance and height some opponents also cited misinformation related to 5G technology 48 49 Neighborhoods such as the West Village 50 and the Upper East Side passed regulations opposing the Link5G poles 48 Conversely city officials and businesses supported the installation of the poles 49 Following a letter from U S representative Jerrold Nadler 51 the Federal Communications Commission FCC ruled in April 2023 that the poles needed to undergo environmental and historic preservation reviews 52 53 Description editLinks edit The Links are 9 5 feet 2 9 m tall and are compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 14 25 There are two 55 inch 140 cm high definition displays on each Link 2 4 24 54 for advertisements 2 15 16 21 and public service announcements 2 5 There is an integrated Android tablet embedded within each Link which can be used to access city maps directions and services as well as make video calls 2 4 5 they were formerly also available to allow patrons to use the internet but these browsers have now been disabled due to abuse see below 31 nbsp Tablet with keypad 9 1 1 button and headphone jackEach Link includes two free USB charging stations for smartphones as well as a phone that allows free calls to all 50 states and to Washington D C 36 The Links allow people to make either phone calls using the keypad and the headphone jack to the keypad s left or video calls using the tablet 2 4 5 26 Vonage provides this free domestic phone call service as well as the ability to make international calls using calling cards 20 The Links feature a red 9 1 1 call button between the tablet and the headphone jack 4 55 and they can be used to call the information helpline 3 1 1 4 14 55 The Links can be used for completing simple time specific tasks 35 such as registering to vote 56 In April 2017 the Links were equipped with another app Aunt Bertha which could be utilized to find social services such as food pantries financial aid and emergency shelter 57 The Links sometimes offer eccentric apps such as an app to call Santa s voice mail that was enabled in December 2017 35 In October 2019 a video relay service for deaf users was added to the Links 58 The Wi Fi technology comes from Ruckus Wireless and is enabled by Qualcomm s Vive 802 11ac Wave 2 4x4 chipsets 5 The Links operating system runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor and the Adreno 320 graphics processing unit 54 The Links hardware and software can handle future upgrades The software will be updated until at least 2022 but Qualcomm has promised to maintain the Links for the rest of their service lives 54 Links are cleaned twice weekly with LinkNYC staff removing vandalism and dirt from the Links Each Link has cameras and over 30 vibration sensors to sense if the kiosk has been hit by an object 26 59 A separate set of sensors also detects if the USB ports are tampered with 59 If either the vibration sensors or the USB port sensors detect tampering an alert is displayed at LinkNYC headquarters that the specific part of the Link has been affected 59 All of the Links have a backup battery power supply that can last for up to 24 hours if a long term power outage were to occur 28 This was added to prevent interruption of phone service as happened in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy in 2012 which caused power outages citywide especially to the city s payphones which were connected to the municipal power supply of New York City 2 Antenna Design helped with the overall design of the kiosks 14 16 which are produced by Comark subsidiary Civiq 4 60 Advertising screens edit nbsp A LinkNYC kiosk at 23rd Street and Eighth Avenue with side advertising panelNew York City does not pay for the system because CityBridge oversees the installation ownership and operations and is responsible for building the new optic infrastructure under the streets 61 CityBridge stated in a press release that the network would be free for all users and that the service would be funded by advertisements 2 15 16 21 This advertising will provide revenue for New York City as well as for the partners involved in CityBridge 61 The advertising is estimated to bring in over 1 billion in revenue over twelve years with the City of New York receiving over 500 million or about half of that amount 25 26 Technically the LinkNYC network is intended to act as a public internet utility with advertising services 4 However in four of the first five years the Links have been active actual revenue fell short of goals This is partially due to the fact that some local small businesses and non profits were given advertisement space for free 62 The Links advertising screens also display NYC Fun Facts one sentence factoids about New York City as well as This Day in New York facts and historic photographs of the city which are shown between advertisements 35 63 In April 2018 some advertising screens started displaying real time bus arrival information for nearby bus routes using data from the MTA Bus Time system 64 65 Other things displayed on Links include headlines from the Associated Press as well as weather information comics contests and content collaborations where third party organizations display their own information 63 Links in some areas especially lower income and lower traffic areas are expected to not display advertisements because it is not worthwhile for CityBridge to advertise in these areas 38 Controversially the Links that lack advertising are expected to exhibit network speeds that may be as slow as one tenth of the network speeds of advertisement enabled Links As of 2014 update wealthier neighborhoods in Manhattan Brooklyn and Queens were expected to have the most Links with advertisements and fast network speeds while poorer neighborhoods and Staten Island would get slower Links with no advertising 38 CityBridge sold fewer advertisements than expected and it defaulted on 70 million owed to the city in July 2021 40 66 5G poles edit CityBridge began installing Link5G poles across the city in 2022 Each pole measures 32 feet 9 8 m tall more than three times as high as the original kiosks 41 45 the FCC had mandated that the poles be at least 19 5 feet 5 9 m high 67 In contrast to the kiosks the Link5G poles were supposed to be installed in neighborhoods without good internet service ninety percent of the poles were to be placed in the outer boroughs or in Upper Manhattan north of 96th Street 68 The lower sections of many of the poles have tablets USB charging ports 9 1 1 call buttons and advertising displays similar to the original kiosks The upper portions of each pole contain 5G equipment installed by telecommunications companies which can rent space within the poles from CityBridge 41 The 5G antennas measure 63 inches 1 600 mm tall and 21 feet 6 4 m across Next to each antenna is a box measuring 38 by 16 by 14 inches 970 by 410 by 360 mm 45 There are five transmitters atop each pole measuring at least 29 inches 740 mm tall 67 Although Wi Fi service from the 5G poles is provided free of charge users have to pay their telecom companies to receive 5G service 41 The poles also have cameras on them but the cameras are not operational at all times 43 68 Network editAccording to its specifications the Links Wi Fi will cover a radius of 150 feet 46 m 4 5 7 16 21 to 400 feet 120 m 4 23 26 The Links Wi Fi is capable of running at 1 gigabit per second or 1000 megabits per second 2 16 21 23 more than 100 times faster than the 8 7 megabit per second speed of the average public Wi Fi network in the United States 23 26 LinkNYC s routers have neither a bandwidth cap nor a time limit for usage meaning that users can use LinkNYC Wi Fi for as long as they need to 26 The free phone calls are also available for unlimited use 26 The network is only intended for use in public spaces 26 though this may be subject to change in the future 4 In the future the LinkNYC network could also be used to connect lighting systems smart meters traffic networks connected cameras and other IoT systems 54 as well as for utility monitoring and for 5G installations 4 CityBridge emphasized that it takes security and privacy seriously and will never sell any personally identifiable information or share with third parties for their own use 15 2 Aside from the unsecured network that devices can directly connect to the Links provide an encrypted network that shields communications from eavesdropping within the network There are two types of networks a private secured WPA WPA2 network called LinkNYC Private which is available to iOS devices with iOS 7 and above and a public network called LinkNYC Free Public Wi Fi which is available to all devices but is only protected by the device s browser 69 70 Private network users will have to accept a network key in order to log onto the LinkNYC Wi Fi 59 70 This would make New York City one of the first American municipalities to have a free encrypted Wi Fi network 16 as well as North America s largest 4 LinkNYC would also be the fastest citywide ISP in the world with download and upload speeds between 15 and 32 times faster than on free networks at Starbucks in LaGuardia Airport and within New York City hotels 70 nbsp A Link advertising phone charging at the kioskOriginally the CityBridge consortium was supposed to include Transit Wireless which maintains the New York City Subway s wireless system 14 However as neither company mentioned each other on their respective websites one communications writer speculated that the deal had either not been implemented yet or had fallen through Transit Wireless stated that those details have not been finalized yet and CityBridge promised to let the writer know when more information is available 16 The network is extremely popular and by September 2016 around 450 000 unique users and over 1 million devices connected to the Links in an average week 71 The Links had been used a total of more than 21 million times by that date 72 This had risen to over 576 000 unique users by October 4 56 with 21 000 phone calls made in the previous week alone 73 By January 2018 the number of calls registered by the LinkNYC system had risen to 200 000 per month or 50 000 per week on average There were also 600 000 unique users connecting to the Links Wi Fi or cellular services each week 35 The LinkNYC network exceeded 500 000 average monthly calls 1 billion total sessions and 5 million monthly users in September 2018 36 One writer for the Motherboard website observed that the LinkNYC network also helped connect poor communities as people from these communities come to congregate at the Links 74 This stems from the fact that the network provides service to all New Yorkers regardless of income but it especially helps residents who would have otherwise used their smartphones for internet access using 3G and 4G 28 The New York City Bureau of Policy and Research published a report in 2015 that stated that one fourth of residents do not have home broadband internet access including 32 percent of unemployed residents 12 As of January 2018 update the most dialed number on the LinkNYC network was the helpline for the state s electronic benefit transfer system which distributes food stamps to low income residents 35 The LinkNYC network is seen as only somewhat mitigating this internet inequality as many poor neighborhoods like some in the Bronx will get relatively few Links 74 LinkNYC is seen as an example of smart city infrastructure in New York City as it is a technologically advanced system that helps enable technological connectivity 4 74 Concerns editTracking edit The deployment of the Links and the method process eventual selection and ownership of entities involved in the project has come under scrutiny by privacy advocates who express concerns about the terms of service the financial model and the collection of end users data 60 75 76 77 These concerns are aggravated by the involvement of Sidewalk Labs which belongs to Google s holding company Alphabet Inc 60 Google already has the ability to track the majority of all website visits 78 and LinkNYC could be used to track people s movements 60 Nick Pinto of the Village Voice a Lower Manhattan newspaper wrote Google is in the business of taking as much information as it can get away with from as many sources as possible until someone steps in to stop it But LinkNYC marks a radical step even for Google It is an effort to establish a permanent presence across our city block by block and to extend its online model to the physical landscape we humans occupy on a daily basis The company then intends to clone that system and start selling it around the world government by government to as many as will buy 60 nbsp A newly installed LinkIn March 2016 the New York Civil Liberties Union NYCLU the New York City office of the American Civil Liberties Union wrote a letter to Mayor de Blasio outlining their privacy concerns 76 77 In the letter representatives for the NYCLU wrote that CityBridge could be retaining too much information about LinkNYC users They also stated that the privacy policy was vague and needed to be clarified They recommended that the privacy policy be rewritten so that it expressly mentions whether the Links environmental sensors or cameras are being used by the NYPD for surveillance or by other city systems 76 In response LinkNYC updated its privacy policy to make clear that the kiosks do not store users browsing history or track the websites visited while using LinkNYC s Wi Fi 79 a step that NYCLU commended 80 In an unrelated incident Titan one of the members of CityBridge was accused of embedding Bluetooth radio transmitters in their phones which could be used to track phone users movements without their consent 61 81 These beacons were later found to have been permitted by the DOITT but without any public notice consultation or approval so they were removed in October 2014 61 Despite the removal of the transmitters Titan is proposing putting similar tracking devices on Links but if the company decides to go through with the plan it has to notify the public in advance 61 In 2018 a New York City College of Technology undergraduate student Charles Myers found that LinkNYC had published folders on GitHub titled LinkNYC Mobile Observation and RxLocation He shared these with The Intercept website which wrote that the folders indicated that identifiable user data was being collected including information on the user s coordinates web browser operating system and device details among other things However LinkNYC disputed these claims and filed a Digital Millennium Copyright Act claim to force GitHub to remove files containing code that Meyer had copied from LinkNYC s GitHub account 82 Other privacy issues edit According to LinkNYC it does not monitor its kiosks Wi Fi nor does it give information to third parties 26 However data will be given to law enforcement officials in situations where LinkNYC is legally obliged 23 77 Its privacy policy states that it can collect personally identifiable information PII from users to give to service providers and sub contractors to the extent reasonably necessary to enable us provide the Services a third party that acquires CityBridge or a majority of its assets if CityBridge was acquired by that third party a third party with whom we must legally share information about you you upon your request and other third parties with your express consent to do so 83 Non personally identifiable information can be shared with service providers and advertisers 2 83 The privacy policy also states that in the event that we receive a request from a governmental entity to provide it with your Personally sic Information we will take reasonable attempts to notify you of such request to the extent possible 26 83 There are also concerns that despite the WPA WPA2 encryption hackers may still be able to steal other users data especially since the LinkNYC Wi Fi network has millions of users To reduce the risk of data theft LinkNYC is deploying a better encryption system for devices that have Hotspot 2 0 26 28 Another concern is that hackers could affect the tablet itself by redirecting it to a malware site when users put in PII or adding a keystroke logging program to the tablets 59 To protect against this CityBridge places in a series of filters and proxies that prevents malware from being installed ends a session when a tablet is detected communicating with a command and control server and resets the entire kiosk after 15 seconds of inactivity 59 69 The USB ports have been configured so that they can only be used to charge devices However the USB ports are still susceptible to physical tampering with skimmers which may lead to a user s device getting a malware infection while charging this is prevented by the more than 30 anti vandalism sensors on each Link 59 69 Yet another concern is that a person may carry out a spoofing attack by renaming their personal Wi Fi network to LinkNYC This is potentially dangerous since many electronic devices tend to automatically connect to networks with a given name but do not differentiate between the different networks 59 One reporter for The Verge suggested that to circumvent this a person could turn off their mobile device s Wi Fi while in the vicinity of a kiosk or forget the LinkNYC network altogether 59 The cameras on the top of each kiosk s tablet posed a concern in some communities where these cameras face the interiors of buildings However as of July 2017 update the cameras were not activated 34 Browser access and content filtering edit nbsp A Link with its tablet turned off due to the screens browsing capabilities being shut off in September 2016 Instead the tablet shows the reflection of the street scene in the background In the summer of 2016 a content filter was set up on the Links to restrict navigation to certain websites such as pornography sites and other sites with not safe for work NSFW content 84 This was described as a problem especially among the homeless 85 and at least one video showed a homeless man watching pornography on a LinkNYC tablet 84 This problem has supposedly been ongoing since at least January 2016 85 Despite the existence of the filter Link users still found a way to bypass these filters 69 71 86 87 The filters which consisted of Google SafeSearch as well as a web blocker that was based on the web blockers of many schools were intentionally lax to begin with because LinkNYC feared that stricter filters that blocked certain keywords would alienate customers 87 Other challenges included the fact that stimulating user generated content can be found on popular relatively interactive websites like Tumblr and YouTube it is hard to block NSFW content on these sites because that would entail blocking the entire website when only a small portion hosts NSFW content In addition it was hard if not impossible for LinkNYC to block new websites with NSFW content as such websites are constantly being created 87 A few days after Diaz s and Johnson s statements the web browsers of the tablets embedded into the Links were disabled indefinitely due to concerns of illicit activities such as drug deals and NSFW website browsing 31 88 LinkNYC cited lewd acts as the reason for shutting off the tables browsing capabilities 86 One Murray Hill resident reported that a homeless man enthusiastically hump ed a Link in her neighborhood while watching pornography 85 Despite the tablets being disabled the 9 1 1 capabilities maps and phone calls would still be usable and people can still use LinkNYC Wi Fi from their own devices 72 86 88 The disabling of the LinkNYC tablets browsers had stoked fears about further restrictions on the Links The Independent a British newspaper surveyed some homeless New Yorkers and found that while most of these homeless citizens used the kiosks for legitimate reasons usually not to browse NSFW content many of the interviewees were scared that LinkNYC may eventually charge money to use the internet via the Links or that the kiosks may be demolished altogether 89 The Guardian another British newspaper came to a similar conclusion one of the LinkNYC users they interviewed said that the Links are very helpful but of course bad people messed it up for everyone 90 In a press release LinkNYC refuted fears that service would be paywalled or eliminated though it did state that several improvements including dimming the kiosks and lowering maximum volumes were being implemented to reduce the kiosks effect on the surrounding communities 72 Immediately after the disabling of the tablets browsing capabilities reports of loitering near kiosks decreased by more than 80 56 73 By the next year such complaints had dropped 96 from the pre September 2016 figure 91 The tablets use as a whole has increased 12 with more unique users accessing maps phone calls and 3 1 1 56 73 Nuisance complaints edit There have been scattered complaints in some communities that the LinkNYC towers themselves are a nuisance These complaints mainly have to do with loitering browser access and kiosk volume the latter two of which the city has resolved 34 However these nuisance complaints are rare citywide of the 920 kiosks installed citywide by then there had been only one complaint relating to the kiosk design itself 34 In September 2016 the borough president of the Bronx Ruben Diaz Jr called on city leaders to take stricter action saying that after learning about the inappropriate and over extended usage of Links throughout the city in particular in Manhattan it is time to make adjustments that will allow all of our city residents to use this service safely and comfortably 71 City Councilman Corey Johnson said that some police officials had called for several Links in Chelsea to be removed because homeless men had been watching NSFW content on these Links while children were nearby 31 92 Barbara A Blair president of the Garment District Alliance stated that people are congregating around these Links to the point where they re bringing furniture and building little encampments clustered around them It s created this really unfortunate and actually deplorable condition 31 A related problem arising from the tablets browser access was that even though the tablets were intended for people to use it for a short period of time the Links began being monopolized almost as soon as they were unveiled 71 Some people would use the Links for hours at a time 31 Particularly homeless New Yorkers would sometimes loiter around the Links using newspaper dispensers and milk crates as makeshift furniture on which they could sit while using the Links 31 74 92 The New York Post characterized the Links as having become living rooms for vagrants 93 As a result LinkNYC staff were working on a way to help ensure that Links would not be monopolized by one or two people 71 72 Proposals for solutions included putting time limits on how long the tablets could be used by any one person 94 Some people stated that the Links could also be used for loitering and illicit phone calls 92 95 One Hell s Kitchen bar owner cited concerns about the users of a Link located right outside his bar including a homeless man who a patron complained was a creeper watching animal pornography as well as several people who made drug deals using the Link s phone capabilities while families were nearby 95 In Greenpoint locals alleged that after Links were activated in their neighborhood in July 2017 these particular kiosks became locations for drug deals however that particular Link was installed near a known drug den 91 Wider deployment editIntersection in collaboration with British telecommunications company BT and British advertising agency Primesight is also planning to install up to 850 Links in the United Kingdom including in London beginning in 2017 The LinkUK kiosks as they will be called are similar to the LinkNYC kiosks in New York City These Links will replace some of London s iconic telephone booths due to these booths age 96 97 98 The first hundred Links would be installed in the borough of Camden 96 The Links will have tablets but they will lack web browsing capabilities due to the problems that LinkNYC faced in enabling the tablet browsers 99 100 In early 2016 Intersection announced that it could install about 100 Links in a mid sized city in the United States provided that it wins the United States Department of Transportation s Smart City Challenge 101 Approximately 25 of that city s blocks will get the Links which will be integrated with Sidewalk Labs transportation data analysis initiative Flow 101 In summer 2016 the city of Columbus Ohio was announced as the winner of the Smart City Challenge 102 Intersection has proposed installing Links in four Columbus neighborhoods 103 In July 2017 the city of Hoboken New Jersey located across the Hudson River from Manhattan proposed adding free Wi Fi kiosks on its busiest pedestrian corridors The kiosks which are also a smart city initiative are proposed to be installed by Intersection 104 See also editMunicipal wireless networkReferences edit a b c d e f g h Request for Information Regarding the Future of Public Pay Telephones on New York City Sidewalks and Potential Alternative or Additional Forms of Telecommunications Facilities on New York City Sidewalks PDF nyc gov Government of New York City July 11 2012 Archived from the original PDF on August 3 2014 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Chowdhry Amit November 19 2014 Pay Phones In NYC To Be Replaced With Up To 10 000 Free Wi Fi Kiosks Next Year Forbes Archived from the original on September 22 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b c d Dunlap David W April 30 2014 The 21st Century Is Calling With Wi Fi Hot Spots The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 5 2015 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Stilson Janet February 15 2016 What It Means for Consumers and Brands That New York Is Becoming a Smart City AdWeek Archived from the original on October 6 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b c d e f g Kleiman Rob January 19 2016 The first wave of high speed public internet access via LinkNYC kiosks has arrived psfk com Archived from the original on December 2 2018 Retrieved February 10 2016 a b c d Abuelgasim Fay July 15 2012 Pay Phones Getting The WiFi Treatment The Huffington Post Associated Press Archived from the original on July 15 2012 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b c d e Gould Jessica January 5 2016 Goodbye Pay Phones Hello LinkNYC WNYC Archived from the original on August 20 2016 Retrieved January 26 2016 a b c McCarthy Tyler May 8 2014 New York City Seriously Wants To Turn Pay Phones Into WiFi Hotspots The Huffington Post Archived from the original on November 29 2014 Retrieved November 17 2014 a b c d Payphones Get an Upgrade with City s Free WiFi Pilot MetroFocus WNET July 17 2012 Archived from the original on September 17 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b c d Announcing the country s largest continuous free public WiFi network nyc gov Government of New York City December 10 2013 Archived from the original on September 17 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 Horn Leslie December 10 2013 Harlem Is Getting the Biggest Free Public Wi Fi Network In the U S Gizmodo Archived from the original on September 27 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b Stringer Scott September 2015 Internet Inequality Broadband Access in NYC PDF nyc gov Office of the New York City Comptroller Archived PDF from the original on September 17 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b c d e f New York City unveils the pay phone of the future and it does a whole lot more than make phone calls Washington Post November 17 2014 Archived from the original on September 19 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b c d e f g h i De Blasio Administration Announces Winner of Competition to Replace Payphones with Five Borough Wi Fi Network nyc gov Government of New York City November 17 2014 Archived from the original on June 7 2018 Retrieved November 17 2014 a b c d Gigabit Wi Fi And that s just the beginning PDF CityBridge November 17 2014 Archived PDF from the original on January 18 2016 Retrieved November 17 2014 a b c d e f g h i j Silly Mari June 25 2015 Who s Feeding Fiber to LinkNYC Hotspots Light Reading Archived from the original on May 5 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 Dale Brady June 16 2015 Seven Urban Technologies Google Backed Sidewalk Labs Might Advance New York Observer Archived from the original on February 5 2016 Retrieved January 26 2016 Control Group and Titan Merge to form Intersection PDF Press release June 23 2015 Archived from the original PDF on June 27 2015 Retrieved September 16 2016 Google s Sidewalk Labs is taking over the plan to blanket NYC with free Wi Fi The Verge Archived from the original on June 24 2015 Retrieved June 24 2015 a b Crow David January 5 2016 First WiFi kiosks set to land on New York s streets Financial Times Archived from the original on October 16 2022 Retrieved January 26 2016 a b c d e Aguilar Mario November 17 2014 The Plan to Turn NYC s Old Payphones Into Free Gigabit Wi Fi Hot Spots Gizmodo Archived from the original on November 17 2014 Retrieved November 17 2014 DoITT LinkNYC Franchises nyc gov New York City Department of Information Technology amp Telecommunications DOITT December 10 2014 Archived from the original on February 2 2016 Retrieved January 26 2016 a b c d e f Alba Alejandro January 5 2016 New York to start replacing payphones with Wi Fi kiosks New York Daily News Archived from the original on June 24 2017 Retrieved January 26 2016 a b Brandom Russell December 28 2015 New York is finally installing its promised public gigabit Wi Fi The Verge Archived from the original on December 29 2015 Retrieved December 29 2015 a b c d e f g h Crow David January 5 2016 The City s First Wi Fi Kiosks Unveiled Today 6sqft com Archived from the original on 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Retrieved September 17 2016 a b c d e f g h McGeehan Patrick September 14 2016 Free Wi Fi Was to Aid New Yorkers An Unsavory Side Spurs a Retreat The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on September 14 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 Find a Link CityBridge LinkNYC Intersection Archived from the original on September 17 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b Fingas Jon November 14 2016 New York City s free gigabit WiFi comes to Brooklyn Engadget Archived from the original on December 12 2016 Retrieved December 4 2016 a b c d Frost Mary July 31 2017 LinkNYC kiosks not a hit with everyone Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archived from the original on August 10 2017 Retrieved August 9 2017 a b c d e f Williams Keith 2018 What are those tall kiosks that have replaced pay phones in New York The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 4 2018 Retrieved February 4 2018 a b c Wiggers Kyle September 29 2018 LinkNYC s 5 million users make 500 000 phone calls each month VentureBeat Archived from the original on October 20 2018 Retrieved November 1 2018 Otis Ginger Adams August 30 2016 Wi Fi kiosks will replace Bronx pay phones under LinkNYC New York Daily News Archived from the original on September 4 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b c Smith Greg B November 24 2014 EXCLUSIVE De Blasio s Wi Fi plan slower in poor nabes New York Daily News Archived from the original on December 23 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 Correal Annie December 6 2019 Just a Quarter of New York s Wi Fi Kiosks Are Up Guess Where The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 12 2023 Retrieved January 12 2023 a b c d DiNapoli Examines Faltering LinkNYC Program Office of the New York State Comptroller July 30 2021 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 a b c d e f Sandoval Gabriel McWhirter Joshua April 27 2022 Big Tech Pays to Supersize LinkNYC and Revive Broken Promise to Bridge Digital Divide The City Retrieved July 24 2023 a b Deffenbaugh Ryan October 18 2021 City commission questions design for giant LinkNYC 5G kiosks Crain s New York Business Retrieved July 24 2023 a b c Duggan Kevin July 10 2022 City boots up in the Bronx with massive new LinkNYC kiosks featuring 5G capability amNewYork Retrieved July 24 2023 Failing Up First Link5G Smart Pole Stands Quietly in Queens The City March 20 2022 Retrieved July 24 2023 a b c Stewart Dodai November 5 2022 What Are Those Mysterious New Towers Looming Over New York s Sidewalks The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 24 2023 Wassef Mira July 11 2022 NYC s first Link5G kiosk installed in the Bronx PIX11 Retrieved July 24 2023 Siff Andrew December 6 2022 More 5G Towers Are Coming to NYC See Where They Are Being Built NBC New York Retrieved July 24 2023 a b Garber Nick December 16 2022 Towering Upper East Side 5G Poles Shot Down By Community Board Upper East Side NY Patch Retrieved July 24 2023 a b Garber Nick June 8 2023 Hulking 5G towers get biz backing amid neighborhood opposition Crain s New York Business Retrieved July 24 2023 Anderson Lincoln February 22 2023 G shock Rollout of jumbo Link5G towers is roiling the historic West Village The Village Sun Retrieved July 24 2023 Parrott Max April 17 2023 Rep Nadler calls for federal review of Manhattan s 5G poles amNewYork Retrieved July 24 2023 Link5G Towers Must Pass Historic Preservation and Environmental Reviews Says FCC The City April 26 2023 Retrieved July 24 2023 Sommerfeldt Chris April 26 2023 NYC s behemoth 5G towers haven t undergone required reviews FCC says New York Daily News Retrieved July 24 2023 a b c d Shah Agam March 7 2016 Users will get faster free Wi Fi from hubs in New York PCWorld Archived from the original on September 27 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 a b Zeman Eric January 20 2016 LinkNYC WiFi Hotspots Kick Off InformationWeek Archived from the original on January 23 2016 Retrieved January 26 2016 a b c d Pereira Ivan October 4 2016 LinkNYC Over 576 000 have used free Wi Fi at kiosks am New York Archived from the original on October 5 2016 Retrieved October 5 2016 Bliss Laura April 13 2017 Yelp for Social Services Now Available on Hundreds of New York City Wi Fi Kiosks CityLab Archived from the original on May 1 2017 Retrieved October 1 2017 LinkNYC Kiosks Now Accessible for the Deaf www ny1 com Archived from the original on January 3 2020 Retrieved November 20 2019 a b c d e f g h i Carman Ashley January 20 2016 How secure are New York City s new Wi Fi hubs The Verge Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 26 2016 a b c d e Pinto Nick July 6 2016 Google Is Transforming NYC s Payphones Into a Personalized Propaganda Engine The Village Voice Archived from the original on July 22 2016 Retrieved July 25 2016 a b c d e Stuart Tessa November 19 2014 New Wi Fi Payphones May Include Controversial Location Tracking Beacons The Village Voice Archived from the original on August 14 2016 Retrieved July 25 2016 Voytko Lisette May 6 2019 Payphone Replacing LinkNYC Kiosks Not Generating Projected Revenue Gotham Gazette Archived from the original on May 6 2019 Retrieved May 7 2019 a b Wiggers Kyle March 28 2019 LinkNYC s 6 million users have used 8 6 terabytes of data VentureBeat Archived from the original on January 3 2020 Retrieved November 20 2019 Stremple Paul April 4 2018 Bus Time Pilot For LinkNYC Kiosks Misses The Mark BKLYNER BKLYNER Archived from the original on April 6 2018 Retrieved April 5 2018 Flamm Matthew April 4 2018 LinkNYC kiosks to double as bus countdown clocks Crain s New York Business Archived from the original on October 16 2022 Retrieved April 5 2018 Deffenbaugh Ryan July 30 2021 Lack of oversight allowed LinkNYC to fall 70M behind Crain s New York Business Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 a b Combs DeAnn December 21 2022 LinkNYC 5G Poles Spreading Across Gotham Inside Towers Retrieved July 24 2023 a b Weaver Shaye July 11 2022 Thousands of 32 foot tall 5G kiosks will be going up across NYC Time Out New York Retrieved July 24 2023 a b c d Biersdorfer J D August 26 2016 Are the Free Wi Fi Kiosks on New York Streets Safe The New York Times Archived from the original on September 12 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b c Stern Joanna January 19 2016 The Future of Public Wi Fi What to Do Before Using Free Fast Hot Spots Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on December 15 2016 Retrieved December 8 2016 a b c d e Chan Shirley September 12 2016 More lewd acts purportedly spotted at Manhattan Wi Fi kiosks New York s PIX11 WPIX TV Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 a b c d Service Update CityBridge LinkNYC Intersection September 14 2016 Archived from the original on October 14 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b c Fermino Jennifer October 4 2016 LinkNYC kiosks usage rises 12 month after web browsing disabled NY Daily News Archived from the original on October 5 2016 Retrieved October 5 2016 a b c d Huber Linda September 14 2016 Is New York City s Public Wi Fi Actually Connecting the Poor motherboard vice com Vice Archived from the original on September 15 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 Dean Benjamin Hirose Mariko July 24 2016 LinkNYC Spy Stations from HOPE XI LAMARR Livestream video HOPE XI The Eleventh HOPE Hackers On Planet Earth Archived from the original on August 15 2016 Retrieved July 25 2016 a b c Hirose Mariko Miller Johanna March 15 2016 Re LinkNYC Privacy Policy PDF www nyclu org Archived from the original PDF on September 10 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 a b c Waddell Kaveh Will New York City s Free Wi Fi Help Police Watch You The Atlantic Archived from the original on December 25 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Yu Zhonghao Macbeth Sam Modi Konark Pujol Josep M 2016 Tracking the Trackers Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on World Wide Web Montreal Canada International World Wide Web Conferences Steering Committee pp 121 132 ISBN 978 1 4503 4143 1 Retrieved September 5 2016 Intersection December 20 2018 Privacy Policy LinkNYC Archived from the original on December 20 2018 Retrieved January 31 2019 City Strengthens Public Wi Fi Privacy Policy After NYCLU Raises Concerns NYCLU March 17 2017 Archived from the original on January 30 2019 Retrieved January 31 2019 Brown Stephen Rex October 6 2014 Manhattan phone booths rigged to follow your every step New York Daily News Archived from the original on September 17 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 Are New York s Free LinkNYC Internet Kiosks Tracking Your Movements The Intercept September 8 2018 Archived from the original on November 13 2018 Retrieved November 1 2018 a b c PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS STRUCTURE FRANCHISE AGREEMENT Exhibit 2 Privacy Policy CityBridge LLC PDF nyc gov Government of New York City Archived PDF from the original on February 9 2017 Retrieved September 15 2016 a b Chung Jen July 28 2016 Yes NYC s New WiFi Kiosks Are Still Being Used To View Porn Gothamist Archived from the original on September 23 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 a b c DeGregory Priscilla Rosenbaum Sophia September 11 2016 Bum caught masturbating in broad daylight next to Wi Fi kiosk New York Post Archived from the original on September 14 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 a b c Brodkin Jon September 14 2016 After lewd acts NYC s free Internet kiosks disable Web browsing Ars Technica Archived from the original on September 15 2016 Retrieved September 15 2016 a b c King Hope July 30 2016 Why free Wi Fi kiosks in NYC can t stop people from watching porn in public CNNMoney CNN Archived from the original on September 18 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b Burns Janet W September 16 2016 LinkNYC Drops Web Access From Kiosks After Some Users Watch Porn Forbes Archived from the original on September 17 2016 Retrieved September 18 2016 Homeless men took over New York s public WiFi to watch porn TV and YouTube The Independent August 23 2016 Archived from the original on June 14 2022 Retrieved September 17 2016 Puglise Nicole September 15 2016 Bad people messed it up misuse forces changes to New York s Wi Fi kiosks the Guardian Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b Hogan Gwynne September 22 2017 Greenpoint LinkNYC Kiosk Acts As Drug Den Concierge Neighbors DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on October 1 2017 Retrieved October 1 2017 a b c Rajamani Maya August 30 2016 LinkNYC Users Watching Porn Doing Drugs on Chelsea Sidewalks Locals Say DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on September 19 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 Fonrouge Gabrielle August 29 2016 Wi Fi kiosks have become living rooms for vagrants New York Post Archived from the original on September 12 2016 Retrieved September 19 2016 Small Eddie September 1 2016 LinkNYC Should Have Time Limits in Wake of Porn Complaints Official Says DNAinfo New York Archived from the original on September 19 2016 Retrieved September 17 2016 a b Marcius Chelsia Burke Kerry Fermino Jennifer September 15 2016 LinkNYC kiosks still concern for locals even without web browsing New York Daily News Archived from the original on September 16 2016 Retrieved September 16 2016 a b Lunden Ingrid October 25 2016 LinkNYC s free WiFi and phone kiosks hit London as LinkUK in partnership with BT TechCrunch Archived from the original on December 27 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 McCormick Rich October 25 2016 Link brings its free public Wi Fi booths from New York to London The Verge Archived from the original on December 26 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Sayer Peter October 25 2016 London is next in line for Google backed gigabit Wi Fi PCWorld Archived from the original on December 26 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Osborne Charlie October 31 2016 London s Link smart kiosks will be stripped down due to NYC complaints ZDNet Archived from the original on December 26 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Sullivan Ben October 27 2016 London s New Wi Fi Kiosks Won t Have Public Browsing Due to NYC s Porn Problem motherboard vice com Vice Archived from the original on November 1 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 a b Flamm Matthew March 17 2016 The Wi Fi kiosks replacing New York pay phones will soon pop up in another city Crain s New York Business Archived from the original on March 29 2017 Retrieved December 25 2016 U S Department of Transportation Announces Columbus as Winner of Unprecedented 40 Million Smart City Challenge Department of Transportation June 23 2016 Archived from the original on December 26 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Harris Mark July 1 2016 Inside Alphabet s money spinning terrorist foiling gigabit Wi Fi kiosks Recode Archived from the original on December 26 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Strunsky Steve July 22 2017 City to offer free wifi on busy sidewalks NJ com Archived from the original on August 10 2017 Retrieved August 9 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to LinkNYC Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LinkNYC amp oldid 1169585802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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