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Encyclopedia > Cameraphone
A camera phone in use
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A camera phone in use

Camera phones are a type of cellphone which has a camera built in. The world's first camera phone was the J_SH04 made by Sharp Corporation and went on sale in Japan in November 2000. The cameras typically use CMOS image sensors. This is due largely to reduced power consumption compared to CCD type cameras, which are also used. The lower power consumption prevents the camera from quickly depleting the phone's battery. Major manufacturers include Nokia, Samsung, Motorola, Sharp Corporation, Siemens and Sony Ericsson. As of 2004, the resolution in Japan is typically in the megapixel range such as 2 megapixels, in Europe 0.3 megapixels is most common. In 2004, 60% percent of mobile phones in Japan have built-in cameras, and this is expected to rise to 100% in 2005.


As a network-connected device, megapixel camera phones are starting to play significant roles such as crime prevention, journalism and business applications as well as individual uses. On the other hand, they are prone to abuse such as voyeurism and invasion of privacy.


Some organizations and places have started to ban camera phones because of the privacy issues they raise. Such places would include The Pentagon or local fitness clubs. One country, Saudi Arabia, has banned camera phones nationwide. Another, South Korea, requires that all camera phones sold in the country make a clearly audible sound whenever a picture is taken.


Camera equipped mobile phones have been linked to industrial espionage and paparazzi activity. During much of 2004, a top notch black hat hacker named Nicolas Jacobsen had illegal access to the backbone of T-Online USA mobile network. Besides stealing classified US Secret Service documents and selling them on IRC, he amused himself and friends by finding out celebrity phone numbers (including that of Paris Hilton, Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher). Then he siphoned off recently made photos from their handsets and circulated some of the pictures.


Some newer camera phones are also videophones, and can transmit videos and videocalls.


See also





  Results from FactBites:
 
The Observer | UK News | Smile! You're on candid cameraphone (1008 words)
The cameraphone came of age last week as the latest accessory to slip imperceptibly from the niche of eye-catching novelty to join lipsticks and umbrellas in the domain of the everyday.
Cameraphones were much in evidence again among crowds at the royal wedding in Windsor yesterday, but the Prince of Wales ruled that none of their 800 guests could bring one to the reception at Windsor Castle.
Cameraphones are increasingly part of everyday life because wherever you are, you don't have to remember to take your camera.
TheFeature :: It's All About The Mobile Internet (600 words)
"Cameraphones enable an expanded field for chronicling and displaying self and viewpoint to others in a new kind of everyday visual storytelling," wrote Okabe, in a paper delivered at a conference in Korea at the end of 2004.
Okabe's findings make a case that cameraphones represent a new opportunity to tell the story of our lives to ourselves as well as to others, and to share a sense of continuous, multisensory, social presence with people who are geographically distant.
The first cameraphone handset was introduced to what Okabe describes as a skeptical Japanese population in October 2000.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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