LinkNYC

Ever wonder what the future looks like for New York City’s payphones? Well,  you won’t be seeing them for too long as they disappear like the extinct species they’ve become. But a new public utility kiosk is coming along to take their place. LinkNYC, a consortium of experts in technology, media, user experience and connectivity that includes Intersection, Qualcomm, and CIVIQ Smartscapes, has plans to replace them with a high-tech sibling. The launch has already begun with a beta phase rolling out a fiber optic network of kiosks equipped with different types of free services such as high speed internet, web browsing, cell phone charging and calls to within the U.S. Additional apps, features and services will be rolled out on an ongoing basis over the next few years. “It’s going to be the largest and fastest public Wi-Fi network in the world,” Collin Odonell, managing member of CityBridge, said in a prepared statement. “It’s really the first of this kind of network and it’s going to transform the streets and people’s way to access information.” Privacy and security is the main concern, especially when the subject is some public Wi-Fi network. LinkNYC claims it offers two types of networks: a public Wi-Fi one and a private encrypted one. The private, fully equipped network is accessible only by devices that support Hotspot 2.0 (currently, LinkNYC only supports Apple gear). On its public network, LinkNYC will be able to track the user’s MAC address (which won’t be tracked either, claims LinkNYC). In addition, users will have the option to clear their sessions once they’ve done using the kiosk. Please keep in mind though that it’s still very risky to log in to bank accounts over public networks and that even though the user information won’t...