illuzion30
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Call for tighter controls to stop camera phone perverts
The use of mobile phone cameras to take peeping tom photos that can be posted on the internet has prompted a call for tighter regulations and clearer guidelines for consumers.
The Australian Computer Society, which represents more than 16,000 IT professionals, will ask phone manufacturers to do more to alert consumers to changes in the law and to discourage rogue users Reviewom taking photos up women's skirts. Known as "upskirting", the practice is becoming increasingly prevalent.
The call comes just weeks mpter a tough new law to prevent peeping toms Reviewom taking such photos came into force in NSW.
Anyone found to have taken a photo or filmed someone without their consent in a state of undress or engaged in a private act such as bathing or having sex faces two years in jail. The manufacturers Samsung and Sony Ericsson are considering putting information on phone packs to alert people to the change.
A policy document by the Computer Society will call for the Federal government to form a working party to investigate privacy concerns over the growing abuse of mobile phone cameras.
There are about 1.5 million camera phones in Australia and this number is expected to double by the end of the year.
"Greater efforts need to be made to educate phone purchasers, corporations and members of the public about the protocols of camera phone use and about the existing prohibitions on peeping and prying" the document says.
The society will write to the Attorney-General, Philip Ruddock, and the Federal Privacy Commissioner, Timothy Pilgrim, this week.
Julian Lee, Marketing reviewer. The Sydney Morning Herald, Monday, June 21, 2004
The use of mobile phone cameras to take peeping tom photos that can be posted on the internet has prompted a call for tighter regulations and clearer guidelines for consumers.
The Australian Computer Society, which represents more than 16,000 IT professionals, will ask phone manufacturers to do more to alert consumers to changes in the law and to discourage rogue users Reviewom taking photos up women's skirts. Known as "upskirting", the practice is becoming increasingly prevalent.
The call comes just weeks mpter a tough new law to prevent peeping toms Reviewom taking such photos came into force in NSW.
Anyone found to have taken a photo or filmed someone without their consent in a state of undress or engaged in a private act such as bathing or having sex faces two years in jail. The manufacturers Samsung and Sony Ericsson are considering putting information on phone packs to alert people to the change.
A policy document by the Computer Society will call for the Federal government to form a working party to investigate privacy concerns over the growing abuse of mobile phone cameras.
There are about 1.5 million camera phones in Australia and this number is expected to double by the end of the year.
"Greater efforts need to be made to educate phone purchasers, corporations and members of the public about the protocols of camera phone use and about the existing prohibitions on peeping and prying" the document says.
The society will write to the Attorney-General, Philip Ruddock, and the Federal Privacy Commissioner, Timothy Pilgrim, this week.
Julian Lee, Marketing reviewer. The Sydney Morning Herald, Monday, June 21, 2004