Friday, June 18, 2004
Reuters | Latest Financial News / Full News Coverage: "Italy school foils cheats by blocking phone signals
Fri 18 June, 2004 16:47
ROME (Reuters) - Mobile phone-savvy teenagers tempted to cheat their way through exams by sending text messages or scanning pictures of tests could be thwarted by a device that jams signals inside the school walls.
The Enrico Tosi Technical Institute school in northern Italy has found a way to foil the next generation of would-be tricksters with the help of military technology.
'Most schools try and confiscate phones before exams, but this way we can be sure nobody slips through,' said Benedetto Di Rienzo, the head of the school in Busto Arsizio which is testing the devices for the Education Ministry during exams this week.
The box-like units, called C-Guard, were developed by experts from the military and defence industries for Netline Communications Technologies. They jam signals in an 80-metre (262-foot) radius in enclosed spaces.
They could eventually be installed across Italy to prevent cheating during university exams.
Di Rienzo said they have been so successful that the school plans to start using them during regular classes -- a measure likely to ruffle feathers in mobile phone-obsessed Italy where not even the teachers like to be left incommunicado.
'We hope to keep complaints to a minimum by turning the instruments off during lunch breaks,' he said."
Fri 18 June, 2004 16:47
ROME (Reuters) - Mobile phone-savvy teenagers tempted to cheat their way through exams by sending text messages or scanning pictures of tests could be thwarted by a device that jams signals inside the school walls.
The Enrico Tosi Technical Institute school in northern Italy has found a way to foil the next generation of would-be tricksters with the help of military technology.
'Most schools try and confiscate phones before exams, but this way we can be sure nobody slips through,' said Benedetto Di Rienzo, the head of the school in Busto Arsizio which is testing the devices for the Education Ministry during exams this week.
The box-like units, called C-Guard, were developed by experts from the military and defence industries for Netline Communications Technologies. They jam signals in an 80-metre (262-foot) radius in enclosed spaces.
They could eventually be installed across Italy to prevent cheating during university exams.
Di Rienzo said they have been so successful that the school plans to start using them during regular classes -- a measure likely to ruffle feathers in mobile phone-obsessed Italy where not even the teachers like to be left incommunicado.
'We hope to keep complaints to a minimum by turning the instruments off during lunch breaks,' he said."
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