Cuba Bans PC Sales, Greece Bans Video Games 47
GMontag writes: "From the Wired article -- 'The Cuban government has quietly banned the sale of computers and computer
accessories to the public, except in cases where the items are "indispensable" and
the purchase is authorized by the Ministry of Internal Commerce.'
Sounds like the MPAA is making inroads into Cuba. Opposition view at CubaNet." Greece, meanwhile, has banned all arcade games in an effort to stop illegal gambling." (Thanks, MediaBoy77.)
What does the MPAA have to do with this? (Score:2, Interesting)
My god, the original submitter is an idiot. Cuba is a communist nation, arguably the closest thing to a pure Marxist state left in the world. Fidel isn't banning computers because they could be used for piracy. He's banning them for the same reason that China set up that nationwide firewall and proxy server: he doesn't want his people to communicate with the 'decadent' capitalist world.
I imagine that if he thought striking against the MPAA/RIAA would deal a blow to the US economic system, he would be encouraging his people to pirate.
Well now.. (Score:1)
Now I see this article and can't help but think how long before the US government bans computer sales in favor of more controllable set top boxes for everything. =/
Re:Well now.. (Score:1)
hmm.. (Score:1)
Wired says in the article that they dont know why Cuba banned the PC. They're unable to speak with the government. They can only speculate that they're trying to stop anti-Castro people from publishing to the internet from within Cuba.
Re:hmm.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:hmm.. (Score:2)
just thought people would get the joke without needing tags.
Nice to see that *someone* (post by Kanon) [slashdot.org] gets what I submitted!
Re:hmm.. (Score:1)
Re:hmm.. (Score:1)
Re:hmm.. (Score:1)
Re:hmm.. (Score:2)
- Robin
Re:hmm.. (Score:2)
"Movies and entertainment are almost nonexistent simply because they cant afford it."
...But it's the best place in the world for live music.
Gambling (Greece and elsewhere) (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, as John Stossel once pointed out, most state governments in the US heavily restrict gambling except under certain circumstances, then run lotteries and encourage their citizens to play. Silly and hypocritical, at best.
Re:Gambling (Greece and elsewhere) (Score:2)
So says the ads that the states put out, no doubt spending that lottery money.
Re:Gambling (Greece and elsewhere) (Score:2)
But mostly I hate standing in line behind some idiot buying three zillion numbers for all his friends and relations when all I want is a carton of milk. And the machines are pink, for God's sake!
Re:Gambling (Greece and elsewhere) (Score:2, Insightful)
Because if it's not government sanctioned and controlled, the government can't collect taxes on all the money that's exchanged.
They don't want to lose out on all those tax dollars...
Re:Gambling (Greece and elsewhere) (Score:1)
Re:Gambling (Greece and elsewhere) (Score:2, Informative)
There's a reason that sports betting is illegal in most of the US: it would destroy the state lotteries. The typical state lottery has a vig of 50-60% (In Massachusetts, 50% of each ticket is tax and c.10% is taken to cover administrative expenses; only 40% of the take is distributed to winners... thus you have to win 2.5 times more than luck would dictate to break even).
Contrast with a sports book. Assuming standard Vegas odds, the vig is less than 5%, since the payouts are 11-10. In order to break even in sports betting, you only need to be 4-5% better than dumb luck.
It almost makes me wonder if we'd all be better off if the Mafia ran the US... it can't be worse than being run by the RIAA/MPAA... ;o)
Re:Gambling (Greece and elsewhere) (Score:2)
SocialWorm typed: Of course, as John Stossel once pointed out, most state governments in the US heavily restrict gambling except under certain circumstances, then run lotteries and encourage their citizens to play. Silly and hypocritical, at best.
How true. Here in Georgia our governor, King Roy, has started a campaign to ban all video poker machines in the state, referring to it all as "a cancer on our society." Meanwhile the state is pulling down literally hundreds of millions every year selling low-odds big ball and scratchoff tickets to the state's poorest and most ignorant residents. Cancer indeed...
Red Irony (Score:2)
Sad. (Score:2)
Not only has Cuba banned computer sales to individuals, but the story say it's $260 dollars a month for an internet subscription. Annual saleries average $240 dollars. It sounds to me like the Cuban dictatorship has been unsuccessful in it's filtering of "enemy" web content. So they just make it too expensive to read.
There's a reason people are willing to float to the US on unsafe boats and rafts. Life sucks in Cuba. People disappear every day never to be seen again. The standard of living is terrible. School is nothing more than communist indoctrination.
The world will be a better place once Castro kicks off.
Janet Reno is a damn fool. I can't imagine the Cuban exile community in southern Florida ever forgivive Reno for deporting Elian Gonzolas.
Re:Sad. (Score:1)
Just because life sucks in some other country doesn't mean that we have to let everone from that country into ours. Immigration is a privilege, not a right. Besides, Elian belongs with his father, who wants to live in Cuba and wants his son back. Obviously, life can't be that bad over there.
Pied Piper (Score:2)
Some people in other countries actually like it there better than they think they would like it here. It is their right to live in a different kind of society if they want to. It is not our right to tell parents in other countries what kind of society their children must endure.
It would have been a totally different story if Elian's father wanted to come and live in the U.S. with his son, away from horrible Cuba (and the U.S. wanted to let him come), but this was not the case.
Re:Sad. (Score:2)
Elian was an illegal alien found by authorities drifting on one of those rafts and had to be deported because of that. Let's ignore that he was kidnapped by his mother, who risked his life (and lost hers in the process) and then again was held hostage by morons like you.
Re:Sad. (Score:1)
Re:Sad. (Score:2)
The Cuban Adjustment Act (CAA), Public Law 89-732, was enacted on November 2, 1966. The law applies to any native or citizen of Cuba who has been inspected and admitted or paroled into the United States after January 1, 1959 and has been physically present for at least one year; and is admissible to the United States for Permanent Residence.
Neither was he inspected nor admitted or paroled into the US nor present for a year. That alone makes your inane ramblings pointless. Anyway, exile Cubans are all drug-pushing wellfare-leeching terrorists.
Gaming in greece will return (Score:1)
That's not nice! (Score:1)
Re:That's not nice! (Score:3, Insightful)
But obviously it's not a perfect place to live, otherwise so many people wouldn't risk their lives on makeshift rafts and boats trying to cross to the U.S.
And while PCs may be expensive compared to the per capita income, obviously some people have them and can connect the to Internet, and it would seem that is what the Cuban government is trying to limit.
Re:That's not nice! (Score:2)
But I agree, Castro and his cronies are trying to keep everyone under control, even if it also means keeping them in the 19th century.
Re:That's not nice! (Score:2)
Never mind that the whole world besides the US trades with Cuba, the Castro supporters/America haters here just can't apply any objectivity to the situation.
Re:That's not nice! (Score:2)
That said, I think it is kinda stupid to maintain the embargo. It obviously hasn't ousted Castro and his oh-so humanitarian government and at this point the simplest way to undermine him is to get Cubans living well. Cuba is not much of a physical risk without the Soviet Union behind it.
Re:That's not nice! (Score:2)
Just a couple of points: (Score:2)
2) Cuba is a carribean country, whose main income (under Batista) was from tourism and sugar sold to the US. So the effect of an embargo is greater than for other countries. But, yes, other nations still trade with it -- but that trade is not as economically efficient (transport costs + size of market) as trade with the US was in the 50's. US tourism, of course, is much harder to replace with the European market because of the distance.
3) It's not just trade, of course, but lack of investment which hurts Cuba quite a bit.
4) Despite this, Cuba, by most standards is much better off than Peru, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, El Salvador, and many other latin American countries. Politically, it's a harsh dictactorship with strict controls on the press and political speech. On the other hand, the level of murder and repression can't be compared to Central or Latin America as a whole. Castro, tyrannical as he is, is a pussycat compared to the generals and juntas which rule many of his neighbors, and there are no death squads roaming the streets in Cuba. There are several dozen dissidents in jail at anyone time in Cuba, wheras many latin american nations have hundreds of political murders every year, and Peru has several thousands of political prisoners.
5) The many thousands of refugees from Cuba wishing to come to the US to avoid persecution and for a better economic life gain much spotlight in the press, and are generally allowed to stay if they reach US soil. But don't forget the millions of political and economic refugees coming from Haiti, Central America, and the Dominican Republic. Now weigh that by the fact that Cuba is relatively close to Florida, and that cuban refugees know they will be granted asylum if they can make it here, and you'll find out that the refugee flows are about the same from Cuba as from the rest of Latin America.
6) Instead of bashing this country, why not trade with it, like we do with China or Peru, and try to make the life of it's people a bit better?