“Giving is receiving” is an old adage that doesn’t work for everyone — at least, not when it comes to Wi-Fi. Few of us are happy to discover unauthorized others have been leeching bandwidth off our hotspots‘ signals.
But a new kind of WiFi hotspot launching later this year wants to change that.
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It’s called Karma. And, like the regular kind of karma, it works by returning to you what you share with others. In this case, Wi-Fi.
Anyone in the vicinity can log on to your Karma Wi-Fi hotspot for a pay-as-you-go fee of $14 per GB of data. In return for each person who purchases connectivity through your device, you earn 100 Megabytes of free data — about enough to browse the Internet for five hours, and open 10,000 emails.
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“It is not tied to a device, or to a network, but to you,” co-founder Steven van Wel explains.
In other words, you can use data purchased or earned over one Karma Wi-Fi hotspot to log onto another. There are no contracts, overage fees or subscriptions.
The startup expects to begin shipping hotspots by the end of 2012. The hotspots will sell for $69 and can support up to eight devices.
Karma isn’t a broadband provider itself, but it does partner with providers. And it adds a a subtle social layer to sharing Wi-Fi.
Users login to their accounts via Facebook so that hotspot owners can see who is using their device, and they can send a thank you note to a device owner after using it.
If it catches on, Karma could make connecting to the Internet anywhere easier. How many times have you turned on a connected device in a hotel room or restaurant and found a list of private, locked networks — but no open Wi-Fi access?
Ultimately, whether or not Karma is a good deal depends on your device and data habits. ATT, Verizon and T-Mobile all offer 5GB of data per month starting at $50. So if you use more than that — if you watch a lot of Netflix on your iPad, say — Karma could help you avoid expensive overages. Especially if you’re sharing your signal a lot and earning free bandwidth.
Will you be giving Karma Wi-Fi a try? Let us know why or why not in the comments.
This story originally published on Mashable here.
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