[x-pubpol] Russia: MINISTRY SEEKS TO SHIELD CHILDREN FROM PUBLIC WI-FI

Joly MacFie joly at punkcast.com
Tue Oct 9 12:11:23 PDT 2012


MINISTRY SEEKS TO SHIELD CHILDREN FROM PUBLIC WI-FI

http://www.sptimesrussia.com/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=36293

MOSCOW — The Communications and Press Ministry has proposed banning
children from using Wi-Fi networks in public, potentially making cafes,
restaurants and other locations providing the service responsible for
enforcing the law.

An official with the ministry’s Federal Mass Media Inspection Service,
known as Roskomnadzor, said the ban should apply to people under 18 years
old.

Locations providing Wi-Fi access would be held legally responsible for
implementing the rule, and failing to meet the proposed measure would
result in a fine ranging from 20,000 rubles to 50,000 rubles ($640 to
$1,600), Vedomosti reported Thursday.

In Moscow alone, thousands of cafes, fast-food outlets and restaurants, as
well as many parks, shopping malls and hotels, have Wi-Fi networks, which
let laptop and handheld-computer users go online without a cable or modem.

Maxim Ksenzov, one of the watchdog’s deputy directors, announced the plan
at a Wednesday conference with Internet media representatives, Vedomosti
reported, citing participants in the conference.

Ksenzov said the proposal is tied to the Internet restriction law that
comes into effect Nov. 1, allowing the government to block Web pages that
fit the law’s definition of material harmful to child welfare.

Under that law, the government can force websites, website-hosting
companies and Internet service providers to block offending sites.

Watchdog spokesman Vladimir Pikov told RIA-Novosti the service hasn’t
decided whether Wi-Fi providers or owners of businesses offering their own
Wi-Fi would be responsible under the law.

Citizens are no longer considered minors in Russia when they reach the age
of 18, but people can obtain permission from regional authorities to marry
at 16 and can get a motorcycle license at that age.

At national cafe chain Shokoladnitsa, “there are no methods at present that
make it possible to identify the age of users logging on to the free Wi-Fi
in our shops,” said Gennady Sbytov, the company's vice president for
information technology.

“We see a solution to the [broader] issue in restricting access to certain
web portals, in accordance with the law, for all guests,” he said by
e-mail. “That way, Wi-Fi access would remain available.”

Sbytov said any Wi-Fi restriction at Shokoladnitsa would happen only if
required by law.

Also affected by the proposal would be other major food chains providing
free Wi-Fi, such as Subway, McDonald's and Kofe Khaus.
-- 
---------------------------------------------------------------
Joly MacFie  218 565 9365 Skype:punkcast
WWWhatsup NYC - http://wwwhatsup.com
 http://pinstand.com - http://punkcast.com
 VP (Admin) - ISOC-NY - http://isoc-ny.org
--------------------------------------------------------------
-
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.isoc-ny.org/pipermail/x-pubpol-isoc-ny.org/attachments/20121009/30a9f2ee/attachment-0001.htm>


More information about the x-pubpol mailing list