British regulators OK cell phones in planes

Fri Apr 4, 2008 11:28AM EDT

See Comments (81)

One of the final hurdles preventing Europeans from chit-chatting on their cell phones while hurtling through Euro airspace has been cleared, as UK regulator Ofcom (akin to our FCC), has given the OK for cell phones to be used on planes, as long as they're above 3,000 meters. (Many of the other approvals required across Europe have already been granted.)

While the idea of airborne cell phone usage has been a public disaster in the U.S., Europeans seem somewhat warmer to the notion. Perhaps it's the generally shorter flights that tend to dominate Europe, or perhaps it's cultural: Cramped, loud buses and subways tend to be the norm, so the additional noise of a few people on their phones may tend to bother Europeans less than it does their privacy-and-silence-obsessed American counterparts.

Just because Ofcom has signed off, though, that doesn't mean that cell phones will immediately start being whipped out as soon as that 10,000-foot bell chimes en route to Grenoble. It's up to individual airlines now to decide whether they want to offer cell phone in-flight services, and then they have to install the equipment on their planes to make it work. Europe's Aviation Safety Agency also has to approve any new equipment installed on planes (though this is not seen as a major obstacle; all new electronics devices installed on jets have to be approved in this manner). It's also worth noting that no airline has formally applied for permission to offer such services yet, though this is probably just a matter of time.

Of course, in the U.S., no such plans are underway, though those hopeful for getting Internet access while airborne are in for a treat. This week, the FAA approved plans for American Airlines to offer in-flight Wi-Fi service, and that approval can potentially be applied to any U.S. airline that wants to offer the same type of technology (provided by Aircell). No news on a date when such services will be turned on, but many are hoping to have live Wi-Fi rolled out on at least a few planes by the end of the year.

UPDATE: The EU has OK'd the plan, too

Previously: The Refrain in Spain is Mainly on the Plane
Europe Closer to Allowing Cell Phones on Planes

Comments on British regulators OK cell phones in planes

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  • 6 Posted by nypi_us on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:42PM EDT Report Abuse

    Trying to stop people speaking on phones is just control-freakery gone mad. Would you tell two people next to you to stop speaking to each other or to the flight attendant? There's no difference. The real reason why this has taken so long to introduce is because the airlines were looking for a way to charge big bucks for the service, which they will do with mobile phones and Internet access. So, don't worry. Most of us won't be able to afford this luxury when it becomes available.

  • 7 Posted by bearcub12350 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    restrict it to a small area of the plane. for a lot of people this is down time for them and they don't need to hear someone loud on the phone.

  • 8 Posted by zenitani on Thu Sep 3, 2009 11:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    yes i agreee with both comments above ! wifi would be wonderfull and i hate it when im trying to rest and ppl talking on phone besides me with no manner.

  • 9 Posted by maromedic on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    I can not wait. The best idea since invention of air travel. I just hope person next to me has got all the lates music downloads on their mobile or at lest few family problems to share with me.

  • 10 Posted by andrew_choice on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    Here's one step forward for man.....one giant leap backward for mankind.

  • 11 Posted by newtigator on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    I simply won't fly on a plane if anyone within 5 rows is allowed to use a cell phone. Many others feel the same way. This could be the the last nail in the coffin for US airlines if they adopt this!!

  • 12 Posted by ozesprit on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Wrong about Americans being privacy obsessed....it it just the same for many europeans. If cell phones will be allowed on planes, I for one will stop flying all together. It is already bothersome enough on trains, but still far worse in restricted airplanes. it was one of the very few advantages that flying had over trains. I hope that it will be a public disaster in Europe too!!!!

  • 13 Posted by tatianainchina on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    Picture this... Someday, you may be traveling via Chinese airline which has okayed cell phone use...just the way it seems to be okayed at the movies...

  • 14 Posted by buks909 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    This use of technology is long overdue. It is clear that the monopolies and regulators continue to hamper it's adoption in order to maintain control of the populus. This is nothing new in their eyes to extort mre fees and taxes from your wallet when you already pay good money for a service. I take offense and disagreement to this writer's jabs at Americans and their tendancy to blather. Asians are truly the appropriate culture to be slandering [if any] about privacy obsession. Broad adoption by that demographic of text messaging is the proof. So concerned are they with offending or disrupting a fellow communter, it is seen as very rude to talk on the phone in a crowded public area [which I agree], so they use the messaging features of their phone relentlessly. I don't have a closing to capitalize this point, I just simply want to point out where this journalist is flawed in their viewpoint. It seems like a neverending correction of the media, seeing as how often they get it wrong.

  • 15 Posted by ozesprit on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    talking on the phone is typically much louder nd far more intrusive than people talking to each other. 5 rows won't be enough and even a quiet aera won't do it either. Keep it banned! People are already stressed enough so that antistress programme budgets and illnesses go up and up....why is there always someone insisting on making things worse?

  • 16 Posted by isabella1880 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    Can someone tell me why people are allowed to spam the board with celebrity gossip? Aren't there enough boards specfically for them? Please cut it out or I will start reporting it as abuse.

  • 17 Posted by chadwick.graham on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    What a disaster, whoever wants to be sitting in coach with the inane jabber of countless voices ringing home to say I am on an aeroplane etc etc. Crazy beyond belief. I was on a train in the UK last week with a woman for most of a 2 hour journey, jabbering away to someone about what in effcet was NOTHING. It must be even worse for those who paid Business Class , or even 1st class, or maybe they will be the worst offenders.

  • 18 Posted by myopinion13 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    I do not like the idea of having people talking in the planes, trains, boats, movie theaters, etc. It is SO disturbing having someone or group of people talking loudly next to you. I pay for a minimum comfort(coach class)and do not want offered silence beeing taking from me, especialy if flying is my only way to get from point A to B. What is next NO children on board policy? Another comment. Those of us travaling by TGV know how hard it is to get a seat in "silence car", but even in them some people talk on the phone. That is a sad decision and the seddiest is that we probably will have to accept? because who fly the most?

  • 19 Posted by vinita1997 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    It's going to be nightmarish to hear people talk in the planes...imagine out of the 200 passengers even if 50 decide to keep yapping.....it would be nightmarish..worse is the enormous amount of dialects, ringtones heard althrough out...we would soon not need inflight entertainment. We would also need to pay more for a no cell phone zone on airlines...phew!

  • 20 Posted by fmuilwijk on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    Not that I agree on the fact that we MAY be using cellphones in aircrafts in the near future but I find this article very negative towards Europeans. "Europeans seem somewhat warmer to the notion. Perhaps it's the generally shorter flights that tend to dominate Europe, or perhaps it's cultural: Cramped, loud buses and subways tend to be the norm, so the additional noise of a few people on their phones may tend to bother Europeans less than it does their privacy-and-silence-obsessed American counterparts." wonderful stereotyping and I mean that in the most sarcastic way possible.

  • 21 Posted by mermel72 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    completely irrelevant, you cant get cell phone service at that altitude.

  • 22 Posted by mermel72 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    completely irrelevant, you cant get cell phone service at that altitude.

  • 23 Posted by brigitte_bouchet on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ofcom is for UK only. It has no jurisdiction on Europe, just UK. The European Union is 26 more countries, Europe is more (add Switzerland, Norway, etc...).

  • 24 Posted by isabella1880 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    "People are already stressed enough so that antistress programme budgets and illnesses go up and up...." This is a good point, we have an increasingly intrusive society where people are contactable every hour of every day, I know people who take their business calls on holiday, people who NEVER switch off, never rest, never have some quiet time because they believe that they should be available 24/7. I wonder what that is doing for the mental health of this nation. When you think about it, most of the calls we make are entirely frivolous and could wait until we get to a landline.

  • 25 Posted by jerruu on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    the human race is doomed.

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