March 6, 2008 3:08 PM PST

Denver airport censors free Wi-Fi network

Travelers using Denver International Airport's free Wi-Fi service may be shocked to learn that some popular Web sites with supposedly racy content is blocked from viewing.

That's right. Officials have blocked access to content they deem provocative on the airport's free Wi-Fi service.

The Denver Post points out that some of those questionable sites include, Vanity Fair, the gossip column perezhilton.com, the hipster-geek site boingboing.net, and photos from the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue. Of course, hard copies of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue are displayed on newsstands in the airport along with issues of Penthouse and Hustler.

But the airport's spokesman Chuck Cannon told the Associated Press on Wednesday that he would rather "weather infrequent complaints about access than handle angry parents whose children might see pornography." The airport started blocking various sites when the service became free in November. Previously, users had to pay a fee to access Wi-Fi.

The airport is supposedly using the same technology that's used by the governments of Sudan and Kuwait to repress free speech.

The news has set off a firestorm of criticism from folks such as David Byrne, founder of the rock group "Talking Heads." He told the Denver Post that officials in Denver should "give people some credit. And the more credit you give them, the more they respond. It's just trusting people's discretion.

Byrne was supposedly blocked from boingboing.net while connecting through Denver on his way to Aspen last month.

What do you think about airport officials blocking content on their free Wi-Fi network? If they provide free access should they tell you which sites you can visit? And if that's the deal, would you rather simply pay for access? Feel free to comment in our "TalkBack" section below.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 13 comments (Page 1 of 1)
Who is making the decisions...
by Lee in San Diego March 6, 2008 4:00 PM PST
Who is making the decisions Anthony Comstock? If they can filter out what they consider racy content then they can filter sites that go against the censor's political ideology.
Reply to this comment
Their Business, Their Right- Fine for Them
by WillSimpson62 March 6, 2008 4:15 PM PST
It's a private business, they can set whatever rules they want. I'd rather have restricted free content than anything for ten bucks an hour like most air ports. Besides, I think that it's probably healthy to block porn, even if the occasional gossip site gets caught in the mix, in the interests of children using the network.
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Evil blocking technology...
by cameronjpu March 6, 2008 5:03 PM PST
"The airport is supposedly using the same technology that's used by the governments of Sudan and Kuwait to repress free speech." Oooooohhhhh, it must be REALLY evil then! I bet its the same technology the Red Cross and the little sisters of the poor use to block access to porn sites on their networks too. I hate it when writers use rhetorical devices like that, it smacks of a bad writer.
Reply to this comment
just for that i'm gonna start reading playboy at the gate!
by michaelcurrey March 6, 2008 5:26 PM PST
that's so dumb! would they try to kick me out if i used my own wirless modem to go to playboy.com? what if i bought a porm mag at the bookstore in the airport and started reading it? you give someone power and they'll use it.
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Airport wifi is kind of risky anyway.
by Wookiee-1138 March 6, 2008 9:17 PM PST
I'd stick with a tethered connection.
Reply to this comment
Those that pay, have the say
by smcarter March 7, 2008 2:30 AM PST
My thought is that if the Denver Airport is paying for the access, they should have every right to decide the content that they want to make available. On the other hand, I would strongly object to my cable provider doing the same thing, since I pay them for unfettered access. Also, I'm not sure how happy I would be to have dozens of laptops playing videos from porn sited in front of my 3-year old.
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torn
by Dalkorian March 7, 2008 9:15 AM PST
I see both sides of the argument. Taking your kids to the airport shouldn't expose them to hard core bondage pornography, but on the other hand what kind of porn is on Sports Illustrated's swimsuit site, or boingboing? It is free access controlled by the airport, but the airport does take quite a bit of tax money making it a public entity of sorts. I guess I would have fewer problems with it if it was just the hard core stuff, people shouldn't be watching that in public anyway. But some of the sites they chose seem odd - like they're trying to drive up revenue on the news stand or something.
Reply to this comment
Free me
by H756 March 7, 2008 1:50 PM PST
I saw this story on larryflynt.com just glad I was not in the Denver airport. The funny thing is you can still buy Hustler in the airport, you just can?t look on your computer. What are they so afraid of?
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