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Posted on June 13th, 2008 by Stuart Turton

Microsoft’s manners masterplan: Why we’ve brought it on ourselves

iPhone So, Microsoft wants to be able to silence your mobile at will… I like it.

Let’s begin where all good stories should. Microsoft has filed a patent for a technology it’s calling Digital Manners Policy which would basically tell your phone what features could be used in certain situations. For example, enter a cinema and DMP would automatically shift your phone to vibrate mode, so the ringing doesn’t disturb others watching the film. In a museum it could disable your camera, stopping you from photographing rare portraits. If somebody robbed a bank, they could presumably hack the DMP to stop outgoing phonecalls – but that’s neither here or there, really.

Understandably, the patent has come under attack from privacy advocates, but what upsets me is not that Microsoft is coming up with this technology, but that as a society we’ve become so discourteous to each other that we’ve opened the door to it in the first place. And it’s everywhere – London public transport is currently running ads reminding us to give up our seats up to pregnant women, advising us to save our slanging matches for when we get home, and generally begging us to be civil to one another.

It’s utterly ridiculous, and utterly necessary. And that’s tragic. People are constantly whinging about the Big Brother state, but at the end of the day, if your kid brother is an unruly little sod who needs a slap to keep him out of trouble, then a big brother is no bad thing. Quite clearly the patent will never lead anywhere – aside from the legal complications, the technical hangups of making DMP work with all the different devices would be a nightmare. But here’s the thing… and whisper it… it’s not a bad idea. Because if we can’t even be trusted to be civil to each other, then we really are inviting this sort of thing on ourselves.

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2 Responses to “ Microsoft’s manners masterplan: Why we’ve brought it on ourselves ”

  1. Joseph Engo Says:
    June 16th, 2008 at 9:10 pm

    Classic example of why I refuse to purchase Microsoft products. I will not purchase a device that is capable of this. I can’t imagine anyone who would purchase a product that does this, they are going to have a very hard time selling it.

     
  2. Pete Says:
    June 19th, 2008 at 2:23 pm

    Joseph,

    You might not want to use any mobile telephone in thhe UK then, as the British government has the ability to restrict your phone use at will in times of crisis.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACCOLC

    If only cinemas had access to implement this system on local cells providing service to their screens, they could just limit access to those people with ACCOLC level 10+ :)

    – Pete.

     

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