On CNET: How to safely clean a glossy screen
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Ben Charny
Posted on ZDNet News: Sep 22, 2004 6:00:00 PM

Nokia on Wednesday announced plans for new software that will allow customers to have more control over access to mobile content.

The company said the product allows mobile service operators to offer control features that are based on subscriber recognition and user information. For instance, parents can indicate service categories to be barred in order to prevent their children from visiting questionable Web sites.

The product is likely to be available during the last quarter of this year, the company said. Pricing information was not released.

Nokia's new software signals that carriers are searching for better ways to help parents filter out inappropriate content.

For years, this was achieved by a "walled garden" approach in which carriers would make available sometimes thousands of Web sites at a time for download. To get to questionable sites, dialers had to go through the arduous exercise of entering a URL onto a phone.

But this method is no longer as effective, because cell phone manufacturers are making it much easier to input data. Also, with advances in multimedia capabilities, many more Web sites can be downloaded.

"With the increasing amount of new mobile-content services, there are inevitably services and sites (to) which not everyone would want access. Hence, the ability to safely and securely control access to these sites is important for both operators and their subscribers, and our solution allows just that," Nokia Vice President Olli Oittinen said in a statement.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 1 Talkback(s)
Hope it works better than spam filter at work  JP_999ZDNet Moderator | 09/22/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Meet Doc

  • Here to help you with your Document Management Needs
  • Doc is an enigma. Born to a Russian ballerina and a German electrical engineer, he grew up in various locations in the United States. He’s seen the insides of more brands, versions, and generations of printer and printer-related hardware than almost anyone.
  • To learn more about this mysterious figure check out his blog on ZDNet and his Workspace on TechRepublic. You’ll be glad you did.
  • Produced by
    ZDNet and
advertisement
Click Here