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pzmarzly 10 hours ago

The apartment block I live in in Ireland has converted phone sockets into Ethernet using similar converters, except (a) it was in 2004, so 10Mbit base, (b) they ordered whole socket replacements, eliminating the need for separate box outside the walls, (c) the goal was to buy 1 business high speed line, and split it across all apartments, which became obsolete when ADSL, DOCSIS, and later FTTH became affordable options.

I heard the state of the wiring also wasn't great, sometimes apartments had twisted pair wires, while some straight wires, some only have 2 or 3 out of 4 wires connected, etc.

Good to know this technology still exists.

forinti 9 hours ago | parent [-]

This wouldn't be legal in my country unless all the apartments had one owner, because the telcos have a monopoly on communications.

The law says one person can't stretch a cable over to his neighbour, because they would need a licence for that (although if you did do that, who would know?).

consp 9 hours ago | parent | next [-]

My parents shared coaxiale television for years with the neighbors. Technically illegal but there is no way to know with analogue television.

mattmanser 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I think our phone lines must work differently, the entire infrastructure is owned by one company (BT) who must lease it to other companies. So they can do things like this, as everyone needs a router at the end to access it and that's how they charge per customer.

There is a separate cable network, again one operator (Virgin), who don't lease it out.