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The Cell Phone Has Changed — New Etiquette Needed

CWmike writes to share a recent manners-rant that has some great gems about how not to be "that guy" on a cell phone. What rules of engagement are absolutely necessary and what social penalties should become standard practice for repeat offenders? "It's easy to be rude with a cell phone. A visitor from another planet might conclude that rudeness is a cell phone's main purpose. Random, annoying ring tones go off unexpectedly. People talk too loudly on cell phones in public because of the challenge of holding a conversation in a noisy environment with someone who's not present. Cell phones need their own rules of etiquette, or we'll descend into social barbarism."

2 of 585 comments (clear)

  1. YOU ARE TOTALLY RIGHT by spun · · Score: 1, Troll

    1. It is NOT rude to talk on your cell phone in a public place eg on a train or bus or w/e. just like how it isnt rude to have a conversation with a real person there. It pisses me off that on some busses I take they say "please dont use cellphones, it may disturb others" when it doesnt say "people dont talk, it may disturb others". in fact, on a phone there's less talking to be disturbed bya s thre's only 1/2 the conversation.

    TALKING ON A CELL PHONE IS THE SAME AS TALKING VERY LOUDLY WITH SOMEONE RIGHT THERE WITH YOU.

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    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  2. Re:Rules 1 through 7 of using a Cell Phone by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 1, Troll

    "talking on a cell phone is far more distracting than talking with a passenger."

    You have clearly never seen my passengers tits

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    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun