I think it is pretty cool.
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501465_1...e-controversy/
(CBS News) The advertising agency
 Bartle Bogle Hegarty's BHH Labs launched  a campaign at the film, music and interactive festival South by  Southwest (SXSW) in Austin, Texas that is raising ire among critics. In what appears to be a case of poor judgment, BBH Labs kicked off a campaign called "
Homeless Hotspots."  Yep. It is exactly what it sounds like - walking, talking homeless  people who provide access to a 4G network in exchange for a donation  (BHH Labs suggests $2 per 15 minutes). 
 The homeless people in  question include Clarence from New Orleans, who lost his house to  Hurricane Katrina, and Jeffrey from Pittsburgh who was treated for  traumatic brain injury. Their short biographies are heart-wrenching,  immediately evoking empathy for their situation.
 The 13 men who  have been chosen to participate in the program are roaming the streets  of Austin in T-shirts that say "I am a 4G hotspot." The campaign has  drawn ire from some who claim it's dehumanizing.
"The digital divide has never hit us over the head with a more blunt display of unselfconscious gall," 
said ReadWriteWeb's Jon Mitchell and wonders why their T-shirts say "I am a hotspot." Mitchell cited Content Magazine editor 
Erin Kissane's tweet,  "Last thought before sleeping: the difference between 'I'm running a  hotspot' and 'I am a hotspot' is a difference that matters."
 "We are not selling anything. There is no brand involved. There is no commercial benefit whatsoever," BHH Labs 
responded to the criticism in a blog post. The problem is they are selling and branding something: their company. Not to mention, the company's current project "
Underheard in NY." BHH Labs used that project to 
segue to the "Homeless Hotspots" campaign. 
 
In a blog post on March 6,  BHH Labs compared "Homeless Hotspots" with street newspapers, like San  Francisco's Street Sheet or New York City's Street News. That analogy is  troublesome because street newspapers serve to advocate the plight of  homeless people by enabling them to work. 
 Typically, street  newspapers are staffed by homeless people and report on topics that are  relevant to their struggle. The newspapers are then distributed for free  to the homeless, who can sell them on the streets in exchange for a  donation. Using a human being as an Internet connection for a festival  is not quite the same thing.