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-   -   Passports for internet access??? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/passports-for-internet-access-562731/)

Coopers_mom Oct 5th, 2005 10:16 AM

Passports for internet access???
 
Hey everybody,

I'm traveling to Italy with my Mother this coming spring. I've been gathering info from this site and elsewhere for a while now, and I just came across something that made me very curious and I wondered if any of you know any more about it....

I read that Italy passed a law in July that now requires internet cafe owners (not sure if this includes hotels with internet points) to get a photocopy of the passport of anyone asking to use the internet. I believe they are also required to obtain first and last name, the machine used, as well as login and logout times.

Does anyone know about this? Or have you experienced it? Also, does anyone know if this is required for using internet at hotels?

buongiorno Oct 5th, 2005 10:25 AM

Yes, I was just reading about this on Slowtrav.com and according to the posters there it is being enforced by larger IC companies and not being enforced by small ones...sounds typical.


Coopers_mom Oct 5th, 2005 10:39 AM

Well I guess that's a good thing ... but the principle of it still bothers me. Thanks for the info :-)

Simone1 Oct 5th, 2005 10:47 AM

There was some discussion about this yesterday. See the following thread:

http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34687355


111op Oct 5th, 2005 10:47 AM

I can't recall for sure -- but I seem to remember this when I used an Internet cafe in Florence (it's the one in the underground level of the SMN train station). I don't think I showed my passport -- might have shown my driver's license.

My passport was xeroxed when I checked my bags at the Padua and Bologna train stations (and maybe Florence also?). I remember the Padua one well, as they taped it to my bag, and I didn't realize that it was a page from my passport until the xerox copy fell off my bag and I took a look.

Good thing I did.

hiddeneurope Oct 5th, 2005 10:47 AM

This is an absolute red herring. I have used Internet points throughout Italy this past week (in libraries, bars, plus regular cafés) and never been asked for my passport.

Nevertheless, as the USA becomes an ever more totalitarian state, now demanding (as of yesterday, 4th October 2005) that I cannot enter the country without giving addresses I plan to visit, so equally visitors to Europe from North America must expect to receive the same treatment. A bit tough on Canadians, I know, but that's just the way it is.

flanneruk Oct 5th, 2005 10:19 PM

hiddeneurope:

What's your source for "cannot enter the country without giving addresses I plan to visit"?

America requires me, and the other 5.7bn non-Americans, to declare - street number, street and postcode - where I'm staying on my first night. That's it.

What makes you so terrifying you have to declare your full itinerary?

degas Oct 5th, 2005 10:46 PM

I've seen totalitarian states up close and the USA is not one of them by a long shot.

Voyager2006 Oct 6th, 2005 01:56 AM

Since the definition of "totalitarian" is subjective at best can we please not get into a political harangue here?

I agree that the measures supposedly designed to "increase security" are sometimes misguided, much less ineffective, but I cannot understand why anyone would be worried about giving an address where they SUPPOSEDLY are going to spend their first night.

I believe that lying about a lot of stuff on Customs/immigration forms when entering the US has become a matter of course for lots of folks to include how much stuff they didn't buy.

caroline_edinburgh Oct 6th, 2005 03:16 AM

Curious, Coopers_mom : why does this bother you ?

Coopers_mom Oct 6th, 2005 03:49 AM

Dear caroline_edinburgh:

It bothers me because it's an invasion of privacy. It also bothers me because something like this won't bother as many people as it should.

Nikki Oct 6th, 2005 04:06 AM

Does this mean that everybody has to bring a passport to the internet cafe, including local residents? If they did that in the US, there would be a heck of a lot of people who couldn't use the internet because they don't have passports.

Hiddeneurope, I don't understand your point. This does not appear to be aimed at North Americans, but at all internet cafe patrons.

ira Oct 6th, 2005 04:07 AM

>It bothers me because it's an invasion of privacy.<

Hmmmmmmm.

Why would one expect that the use of a public facility is a private act? Public Internet Points are not secure.

It seems to me that requiring ID to use an IP makes it a little more difficult for the bad guys to use the internet to communicate without reducing the "privacy" of those who use them for legitimate purposes.

If I wish to use the computers at my local library, I have to sign up.

((I))

Coopers_mom Oct 6th, 2005 04:08 AM

Dear Simone1:

Thanks for the link. I keyed in various buzz words before I posted this topic, and I couldn't find anything. Sorry for the double thread.

Coopers_mom Oct 6th, 2005 04:15 AM

Dear ira:

I know that internet use is far from private, but to take the extra measure of asking for a copy of one's passport is a step beyond.

Hey, it's all about what gets your goat. This gets my goat. Just my opinion.

starrsville Oct 6th, 2005 04:24 AM

And at least one internet cafe is closing because "he doesn't want to be a "cop" anymore."

http://csmonitor.com/2005/1004/p07s01-woeu.html

Before the law was passed, Savoni's clients were anonymous to him. Now they must be identified by first and last name. He must also document which computer they use, as well as their log-in and log-out times.

Like other owners of Internet cafes, Savoni had to obtain a new public communications business license, and purchase tracking software that costs up to $1,600.

The software saves a list of all sites visited by clients, and Internet cafe operators must periodically turn this list into their local police headquarters

ira Oct 6th, 2005 04:30 AM

Hi CM,

OK. However, don't you have to show ID to take a book from a library, to get on an airplane, to use a railpass, to rent a car, to register at a hotel, to rent a video, to cash a check or money order, etc

This is no worse than video cameras monitoring the streets.

((I))


Steve_James Oct 6th, 2005 04:39 AM

Coopers mom - I was in Italy last week and used several internet points.

I was asked for proof of identity, for which I used my passport - but this was certainly NOT photocopied at any outlet I used.

If they had insisted on a photocopy I would not have used the facility.

Steve

P.S. Hiddeneurope - this is not a 'red herring'.

Coopers_mom Oct 6th, 2005 04:43 AM

Hey Ira,

No, it's not any worse than video cameras patrolling the streets. You're right. It's just *another* thing. What's next? DNA samples? :-)



Coopers_mom Oct 6th, 2005 04:47 AM

Hey Steve,

Thanks for the info. I don't have a problem providing ID, but having someone make a copy to me, is a bit much.

Cheers,
Sondra


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