Find an Internet Cafe!

Search

Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Brazil: IFPI raids hundreds of Internet cafes
Monday, 04 February 2008

 the IFPI announced today that the music industry organization conducted 335 raids on Internet cafes in Brazil, making good on its threat to step up its antipiracy efforts there.

According to the IFPI, the raid was a success. Some 2,339 computers were seized, and more than one million "illegal" audio tracks were found. Despite this, only one (!) arrest was made.

The raid, which consumed intense human resources, sends a message to Internet café owners in Brazil and elsewhere: we can show up and take your stuff, so you should really police your own customers better. An impressive show of police power, more than 600 Special Ops police were involved.

Read more at Ars Technica 

 

 
Internet cafe in China:hot and noisy
Monday, 04 February 2008

Many in China, especially young people, gather at Internet cafes, mostly for recreation.

"Let me tell you something about these Internet cafes and their users," writes business consultant Paul Denlinger in the blog China Vortex. "The people who go there are young, single, low-income males. They do not bring their dates there. The places are smoky, dingy and poorly lit. They sell some basic food and beverages in the front, and also charge people a fee to sleep overnight on the dirty, bug-infested, stained futons which pass for couches. If you want a truly terrible experience, visit their bathrooms. ...

"The characters are sad characters; if they were living in England 150 years ago, Charles Dickens would be writing about them. From the Chinese perspective, although games and the Internet are highly addictive, Internet cafes serve a useful purpose. Otherwise these people would be on the street, unemployed. The Internet cafe today in China is what gin and beer was to England's working class in the mid-19th century when Karl Marx was writing Das Kapital about the evils of class exploitation." Denlinger, reached by e-mail, focuses on Internet startups.

Deborah Fallows, a senior research fellow with the Pew Internet and American Life Project, has spent the past 18 months in China and concurs with the "flophouse" description for many Internet cafes, but says the Internet is having its own sizable effect in China.

Read more at  The Baltimore Sun  

 
US: Father& son turn computer interest into business
Thursday, 24 January 2008

In cities like New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, Internet cafes are a dime a dozen. But in a village like Kenmore, public Internet access outside of the library is hard to come by.

That’s what led Shaun Sisson to go into business with his father, Joe, start up Buffalo Computers in Kenmore and combine an Internet cafe with Joe’s existing computer repair business.

Everyone needs computers, from teenagers looking for information for school to grandparents who want to retrieve pictures of their grandchildren from an e-mail. That makes the store’s demographic broad, ranging from high schoolers to baby boomers, and leads to some interesting conversations, Shaun said.

“Everybody needs to keep in touch to get whatever they want,” Shaun said. “People come in here and then start a conversation with someone else about something that isn’t even what they came in here for. It breaks down barriers, which is kind of cool.”

Read more at Tonawanda News

 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>

Results 9 - 12 of 70
© 2008 CafeTouch