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Icelanders Seek To Keep Remote Nordic Peninsula Digital-Free (apnews.com) 71

Hikers, park rangers, and summer residents of Iceland's northernmost peninsula are seeking to keep the area free from internet service, worrying that all that comes with it "will destroy a way of life that depends on the absence of [email, news, and social media]," reports the Associated Press. "The area has long resisted cell towers, but commercial initiatives could take the decision out of Icelanders' hands and push Hornstrandir across the digital divide." From the report: Despite or because of its remoteness, Iceland ranks first on a U.N. index comparing nations by information technology use, with roughly 98 percent of the population using the internet. Among adults, 93 percent report having Facebook accounts and two-thirds are Snapchat users, according to pollster MMR. Many people who live in northwestern Iceland or visit as outdoor enthusiasts want Hornstrandir's 570 square kilometers (220 square miles), which accounts for 0.6 percent of Iceland's land mass, to be declared a "digital-free zone." The idea hasn't coalesced into a petition or formal campaign, so what it would require or prohibit hasn't been fleshed out. The last full-time resident of the rugged area moved away in 1952 -- it never was an easy place to farm -- but many descendants have turned family farmsteads into summer getaways. Northwest Iceland's representative, Halla Signy Kristjansdottir, is in favor of adding cell towers for the safety of sailors and travelers in the area. "I don't see anything romantic about lying on the ground with a broken thigh bone and no cellphone signal," Kristjansdottir said in an interview.
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Icelanders Seek To Keep Remote Nordic Peninsula Digital-Free

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  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @09:31PM (#57267048)

    You're out in the wilderness and somebody's WiFi is screwing up the colors of the forest and making everything look strange, while the cell towers are driving the wildlife nuts. / sarcasm

    I'd love to hear these people justify how this in anyway diminishes them.

    • by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @09:53PM (#57267130)

      Because they CAN get Farcebook, I guess they Must get Farcebook.
      I mean, you would think they could just choose to turn off their devices, not bring a charger, whatever.

      Although knowing people from such areas, I suspect it is more about giving one big finger to 'thems city folks' (even if most of these people live in the cit\y most of the time).

      Anyway, good on them for caring, but good luck in keeping such things out. The safety point is also quite valid.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @11:25PM (#57267402)

        I mean, you would think they could just choose to turn off their devices

        They don't want to just stop using Facebook, they want their NEIGHBORS to stop using it too.

        This isn't about self-control. It is about controlling others, which is a near universal human desire.

        • by N1AK ( 864906 )

          This isn't about self-control. It is about controlling others, which is a near universal human desire.

          It always has been and it isn't a black and white bad thing. Manners are an example of society trying to control individuals to some extent. I assume in this case the issue isn't that they don't want people to be unable to use electronics but that they don't want there enjoyment of a natural environment to be marred by dodgy ringtones, incessant selfie taking etc; which I can empathise with.

        • by jythie ( 914043 )
          But it is also about who is 'controlling' and who is the 'others'. Is it neighbor against neighbor, or small community against external government and commercial interests?
        • Yes, it is about control!
          I want to control and prevent the idiots that walk in the deep wilderness and blast their shitty (or even good) music or youtube videos for everyone to hear on their shitty-tinny sounding cellphone speaker or slightly better sounding portable bluetooth speaker that still doesn't sound much better than an transistor AM radio from the 70's.

          More power to the Icelanders to keep cell-towers out of this area.

      • by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @11:28PM (#57267410)

        exactly. I just posted a more descriptive explanation of that very thing a thread above this one. Sometimes it's easier to buy a vacation that makes the choice for you, than having to, repeatedly, make the same choice throughout the entire vacation. Picking a destination that has no access means you can re-focus on other forms of entertainment. Its easy to fall back into habits. By picking a spot with no access, you are not fighting temptation, and i dare say withdrawal, the entire time. The price of vacationing in this spot will only increase now that its mandated technology-free.

        • by Kjella ( 173770 )

          By picking a spot with no access, you are not fighting temptation, and i dare say withdrawal, the entire time.

          You don't also have to justify the explicit decision to turn your cell phone off, it was just an implicit decision. If somebody was trying to reach you then "I was at my cabin, there's no coverage" that's kinda end of discussion. Doesn't matter if the server room was on fire, doesn't matter if your old man had a heart attack, doesn't matter if your kid was in a traffic accident. You weren't there but you had no way of being there, short of never ever going to your cabin. Hopefully that never happens but if

      • "I don't see anything romantic about lying on the ground with a broken thigh bone and no cellphone signal," Kristjansdottir said in an interview.

        So.... they could enable emergency services and nothing more?

        Would that be too much like common sense?

    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @10:50PM (#57267306) Homepage

      Forest? *snicker*. Here's the joke everyone over the age of 8 here knows:

      Q: What do you do if you get lost in an Icelandic forest?
      A: Stand up.

      I've actually not been to Hornstrandir; it's been on my TODO list for a long, long time, but I've lacked one of the obligatory "round tuits". So it's actually surprising to hear that there's not internet access (via cell towers) there, because in general even the most remote places here have cell access. When Bárðarbunga erupted, deep in the highlands, the eruption was livestreamed. And there's a lot more people in Vestfirðir then in the highlands!

      This would of course be more about visitors than residents, given that there's no permanent residents in Hornstrandir. And in some ways I can sympathize. For example, there's always a lot of opposition to improving the highland roads because we don't want to have more cars driving through and tons of people flooding in, and driving really fast on some paved road would totally change the experience of going into the highlands... it would just turn into a set of "sites to see" rather than a journey. The effect of the isolation on you can really be profound. You feel like a person exploring Mars - so tiny in an endless empty expanse, completely devoid of any signs of human civilization except the half-bulldozed-out "road" you take, the endless travel punctured by rushes of adrenaline as you try to ford a river or trying to avoid ruining your car crossing a lava field. And people who know that experience generally don't want to see it altered. So I imagine it's the same thing for Hornstrandir. The difference being, as previously mentioned, in much of the highlands there's cell coverage. At least as far as I know, when I go out I'm not checking Facebook all the time. ;) But I don't recall any meaningful loss of coverage events.

      ED: Just checked a map [wp.com] from my cell provider. Looks like most of Hornstrandir is indeed marked in white (no coverage), while most of the highlands is light blue (2G) or in some places blue (3G) - even a good chunk of Vatnajökull (largest glacier in Europe).

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      Actually this intrigues me. I go on cruises for the same getaway. Sure one can declare a weekend of no devices or technology, but theres always something that comes up that eventually screws that up. I go on cruises with the family and we do not buy the internet package. The fact that its ridiculously expensive helps 'cut the cord' when on vacation. The most online time the kids ever experience is when we pull into a port and visit a place that has 'free wifi'; giving them 30-60 min of checking their email

      • The future of vacations in the 21st century are going to center around off-grind spots

        Off-grinder won't be a problem on cruise ships (they don't call them "cruise" ships for no reason!)

    • by GumphMaster ( 772693 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @01:39AM (#57267678)

      You're out in the wilderness and somebody's ...

      bloody mobile phone is playing something loosely called "music" over the shittiest, tinny piezoelectric "speaker" you ever heard. I have personally experienced this scenario while walking the Milford Track (NZ) and in Torres del Payne (Chile). I can only imagine how much worse it would be _with_ coverage: Youtube videos turned up to 11, incessant need to share the latest "news" from home, inattentive walking in dangerous places etc. If your region's livelihood depends on people coming to experience wilderness then this kind of behaviour is frankly detrimental to that. All power to the Icelanders for trying to keep a lid on it.

      If safety is the primary concern then set up a PLB rental service for walkers.

    • screwing up the colors of the forest

      A forest. In Iceland. Good joke! ;)

      • I have seen attempts at growing forest there for the first time. They look pathetic in the grandeur of the Icelandic landscape, like Christmas tree farms.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      It's a bit like what the late canoeing guru Bill Mason said about river portages. Carrying your canoe and gear for a half mile upstream to get around a rapids may not be fun, but it means you'll have stretches of river where there are no power boats. Now you don't have to hate powerboats or want them all to go away entirely to be able to enjoy being away from them.

      If you're a hiker, you don't necessarily object to roads being built to some mountaintops, so people who don't or can't hike can enjoy them. B

  • by crow ( 16139 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @09:46PM (#57267104) Homepage Journal

    We may only be a few years away from Starlink or something similar providing practical high-bandwidth Internet service globally. So they may hold back the tide a bit longer, but the reality is that modern communications will become a fact of life everywhere for anyone that wants it. Yes, that will mean some significant changes to the lifestyles of the people living there, and yes, it won't all be for the better, but I don't see the point of fighting it now.

    • by rossdee ( 243626 )

      How far north are we talking about? Satellite coverage is always going to be a problem at the poles

      • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @10:31PM (#57267258)

        Satellite coverage is always going to be a problem at the poles

        No, that applies to geosynchronous broadcast satellites, but not to LEO constellations such as Starlink or Irridium.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Iridium barely works at all in Hornstrandir, sure, you can get a signal on a top of a mountain but it won't work on the northern side of that same mountain, for emergencies the polar-orbit COSPAS/SARSAT system works well though. We also do have VHF repeaters up there on Drangjökull that provides excellent coverage for emergencies and for SARs communications.

      • by crow ( 16139 )

        Good point. A quick look at Google Maps suggests around 66 degrees north. I'm not the best a geography, and I had thought Iceland was a bit further south. I didn't realize it was north of the southern tip of Greenland. That could well be outside the range of satellite Internet, depending on the orbits involved. I have no idea what the plans are.

        • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

          Seem to remember there was active satellite links in Resolute, Nvt.(74deg/N), so I don't think that's a problem. The real problem was the astronomical cost of those links, short of a stationary polar orbit satellite there is no real way to keep it cheap. So they've been building fiber as a replacement since 2012ish for the far north remote communities at least here in Canada. I think Resolute was finished in 2016ish or so.

          • by crow ( 16139 )

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

            Yes, it will be quite expensive. They're looking nearly 12,000 satellites. Even without the launch costs (which SpaceX is driving down), that's expensive.

            The question is how many customers will they get. It could be a financial disaster or a cash cow.

  • Fuck yes. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Thursday September 06, 2018 @09:59PM (#57267160)
    Fuck yes, I fucking love Icelanders. I'm so sick of seeing smartphone zombies everywhere. The addicts and the stupid will be addicted and stupid anywhere there's an Internet connection. What a wonderful, thoughtful, human decision to make. Wonderful idea.
    • I don't see it as thoughtful or "human" at all. Simply reactionary.

      As long as EVERYONE in that area agrees, fine.

    • I'm so sick of seeing smartphone zombies everywhere. The addicts and the stupid will be addicted and stupid anywhere there's an Internet connection.

      So, to paraphrase, other people are choosing to behave in a way I don't like, and I feel entitled to make them stop.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I spend a lot of time in the woods of British Columbia, Canada. There is no celphone coverage in probably 95% of our woods/wilderness. I don't ask for cel towers, I carry a Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) for safety. If it is that important to someone to be connected, let them use satellite. We don't need more cel coverage for narcisists.

  • Just use German politicians for telecommunication regulation. In the end there will be no WIFI and mobile reception. Unfortunately, this may also affect Reykjavík where all will have to live with EDGE, but hey. Nothing is perfect.

  • This is about saving that particular ecosystem. How am I supposed to enjoy sightseeing if there are no corpses of moron hikers with broken thighbones laying about for me to mock?

  • Since I am currently living close to this area (not too close). I can inform that this area isn't going to get any service from any service provider in Iceland. The main reason is that this area is unpopulated and there are no plans to bring any 3G or 4G service to it. There isn't even electricity in this area of Iceland since it has been unpopulated for more than 100 years. I don't know what noise this people are making over nothing.

    Coverage map (in Icelandic) for 4G service (all providers) can be found he

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