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Gizmo backlash: debate simmers over phones on public transit

There are two types of public transit passengers: those who hate it when other commuters whip out their cell phones and start yammering away, and the yammerers themselves, who feel freedom of communication is a natural right. Some cities have instituted no-phone zones on trains and buses; others have given up. Some enforce bans with fines; others keep it on the honor system.

The world has never been more connected, but in some corners, it's developing a real hang-up over the ubiquitous cell phone.

Taking a cue from France's national railway, which offers phone-free "zen zones" on high-speed trains, Austria's second-largest city this week began ordering public transit commuters to keep their phones on silent mode.

The crackdown in the southern city of Graz has triggered a noisy debate between advocates of free speech and people who say they're simply fed up with having to listen to annoying ring tones and intrusive cell phone chatter.

"I know I insulted the cell phone goddess a little," Graz Mayor Siegfried Nagl said.

"But people need to know they don't have the right to be on the telephone permanently and constantly," he told Austrian television. "It's just not healthy to never be able to get any peace and quiet."

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