Camera Phone Clampdown Demanded
Talkback Demand for a clampdown will mostly come from people with inflated egos; the rich and the famous, tycoons, footballers, people on TV, government and council and civil-service wallahs, quangoites, MPs and Councillors, all of whom now grotesquely and...
[November 19, 2004, 8:05]
Camera Phone Clampdown Demanded
Talkback Let alone ones with Camera's Radio's attached. As a single parent I wish Mobile Phones had never been invented!
[December 18, 2004, 7:49]
Camera Phone Clampdown Demanded
News Industry bodies and activists are calling for tighter curbs on camera phones, claiming that the devices pose a serious threat to civil liberties. Privacy International (PI) warned on Tuesday that it has seen a steep rise in the number of complaints...
[November 16, 2004, 15:10]
Camera Phone Clampdown Demanded
Talkback If someone is intent on taking unauthorised pictures, they will use a camera. I do admit though, that cameras on mobile phones are more ubiquitous than standard cameras.
[November 19, 2004, 12:12]
Camera Phone Clampdown Demanded
Talkback If the user had a camera phone, they would have to be left at security and then be uncontactable in those cases. I accept that the extra functionality can be extremely useful, but a camera is possibly more of a gimmick to generate revenue for the...
[November 18, 2004, 15:02]
Camera Phone Clampdown Demanded
Talkback It's practically impossible to buy a decent phone WITHOUT a camera regardless of whether you want one or not. I don't know of anyone from my group of friends that actually uses the camera. Not because users wanted a camera attatched.
[November 16, 2004, 23:39]
Camera Phone Clampdown Demanded
Talkback i like to have the option to turn off the sound, I always have mine silent - even on my digital camera. Oh and whats the difference between a digital camera and a phone anyway, soon I am sure digital cameras will be able to wirelessly form a link...
[November 16, 2004, 19:45]
Camera Phones Get The Chop In Saudi Arabia
News The clampdown, which is thought to have seen Nokia's 7650 handset withdrawn from sale, follows complaints from religious figures in the country who claim that men have been using camera phones to snap women in contravention of Saudi law.
[October 1, 2002, 11:55]

