We have a lot of very smart people here on the forums, and I'm curious as to what they think of the possibility of something like this...
The way I understand the internet working is it is basically just a giant network. Computers on it are connected by things that can easily be identified. Take me, for example. I use a microwave connection to a receiving tower, which is connected by line to a trunk, which is connected to a major hub. When I go to a website, it goes from that hub to another hub along the way, until it connects to the server that stores the data, and that data is sent back to me. Just a giant network.
The role of my ISP is to provide me access to that hub in some way, shape, or form. They do it by being connected to I believe Time Warner. So I am basically paying my ISP for them to have the infrastructure present to connect to Time Warner. They pay time warner for having the infrastructure that connects 2 different hubs (or more). The server at the other end pays their ISP for the infrastructure to connect up in a similar manner.
So, the bottom line is that the money that flows into and out of a ISP is all about infrastructure. ISPs are nice targets to slap with lawsuits and subpoenas for the elimination of piracy and other concerns.
They are also a convenient target for regulated censorship.So, at first glance this looks like they got everyone who uses the internet by the balls, because ISPs are the only way to get to the data that is transferred. The question I propose is, do they have to be?
Consider this, a network where instead of the data being sent to a centralized location designed to be sent fast (a information superhighway) the data is sent to another computer via wireless connections (information back-roads)
Basically taking wireless routers to the extreme, where an entire neighborhood could be connected up, and a connection at the edge could be connected to a neighborhood a little ways down as well.
It seems to me that this wouldn't be hard to do, and that if something similar to how tor networks appear to work, with information bouncing from computer to computer until it reaches where it should, it seems that it is plausible that the entire internet could work via this system. There would be problems of course at edges of cities and stuff, where distances ensure that wireless routers as they are currently found wouldn't have the range to reach the neighbors, but I think that could be overcome as well.
I suspect that such a thing would be technologically feasible. What do you guys think?