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UK Mobile Providers Introduce WAP Censorship

godsmoke writes "UK mobile providers have formed an alliance to block 'inappropriate content' from cell phone users under the age of 18. 'It covers images, video, gambling, games, chatrooms and net access but not premium rate voice and SMS services', says a BBC News article. The Code authorizing the changes is called the 'Code of Practice', and: 'Content with an 18 certificate will only be available when the network operators verify the age of the user'."

11 of 205 comments (clear)

  1. Censorship by TheSpoom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The new code is going to make many people ask why, if the mobile people can do it, the fixed internet people can't." - John Carr

    Here we go again...

    Cell phones are not the same thing as the Internet. The Internet was design such that if a node goes down, traffic will route around it. A similar thing would happen if censorship were to be pressed upon us at the ISP level (analogous to the cell phone service providers) as users would simply find ways around it with tunneling protocols, mirrors, and the like.

    And I have a feeling that this "new code" will be exploited as well. Of course it's a good thing that the phone companies want to protect children, but there are many ways that censorship like this can aid them in having a monopoly over other providers of mobile phone chat services. We'll just have to see what happens.

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  2. Great! by BoldAC · · Score: 5, Funny


    I see no reason why when somebody purchases the phone, the account can't have a birthdate associated with it... if I wish.

    Then my daughter's phone only allows age-appropriate material.

    I like it. If I could set it to keep all the older guys from calling her, I would pay triple what I pay now.

    Ac

    1. Re:Great! by lokedhs · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Why do children have to be "protected" from nudity, while it's perfectly appropriate for them to see someone head blown off in the latest blockbuser hollywood movie?

      On the other hand, please don't answer that. It's a rhetorical question, meant to make people think.

  3. Question by CGP314 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What if I as the parent of a 17 year old, give them permission to look at porn? Can I have that block removed from their phone... a phone I most likely bought and paid for in the first place?


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    1. Re:Question by 3V1LDaemon · · Score: 5, Funny

      What if I as the parent of a 17 year old, give them permission to look at porn?

      Can you adopt me, please?

    2. Re:Question by Powercntrl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What if I as the parent of a 17 year old, give them permission to look at porn?

      I'd be more worried if I was the parent of a 17-year-old who isn't already looking at porn, parental permission nonwithstanding.

      --

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  4. Inflamatory Title by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Informative

    They are implementing something on their own before a regulatory body tells them to implement it. Kudos to them. Basically they are implementing on cellphones exactly what a vast number of the public have been calling for in the internet, namely making the place safe for kids, and since pretty much every kid over here in the UK has a cellphone, I think this is going to be seen as a positive step forward. Yes, by all means shout the generic shout "but the parents should supervise the kids", but seriously, wap enabled cellphones are an epidemic with the under 18 population over here, and its trivial for someone to purchase one without a parents knowledge, so its a lot easier to supervise a kid on a PC than it is on one of these.

  5. Re:Censorship... exactly. by BoldAC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Surely you are trolling.

    16 year olds don't need internet phones? Who do you think will be programming these things for the next few years?

    If I were 16 right now, I would be hacking away at my cell phone like nobody's business.

    I have no problem with my kids checking their email or schedule or updating their website from their phone...

    I just want a way to know what they are viewing is age appropriate.

    AC

  6. Last place for free speach: Slashdot! by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 4, Funny
    The true test of the right to the freedom of speech is when you allow speech you don't like or disagree with. Well, thank *** that Slashdot still lets us say whatever the **** we want, whenever the **** we want to. It will be a cold day in **** before this place censors us.

    I say "Three Cheers" to free speech, Slashdot, OSDN, and even competition sites to Slashdot such as ******.com or ***********.com

    Thanks again for keeping it real, Slashdot!

  7. Age of consent by Aardpig · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I always found it funny that, in the UK, you can get married and have sex at the age of 16; yet you can't look at porno until you are 18. So it's possible to indulge in the most depraved sexual acts imaginable, but you're not allowed to view depictions of the same acts. Crazy!

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  8. Information control is mind control. by leereyno · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I never cease to be amazed that the time, energy, and money people will spend trying to "protect" young people from the things they don't want them to see.

    The reason for these efforts is simple, information control is the only effective means of mind control. Control what people see and hear and you control what they think. Much of child rearing seems to be institutionalized brainwashing. This made no sense to me when I was a child or a teenager and it makes even less sense to me now at 31, or at least no rational sense.

    There is no rational reason to want to hide things from your children. There are plenty of irrational (and downright sick) reasons I can think of though, most of which are a combination of stupidity and insanity.

    Unfortunately I don't think this will ever change because that would require human nature with all its failing and weaknesses to be improved and that hasn't happened in 10,000 years or more.

    Lee

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