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China

China Slashes Kids' Gaming Time To Just Three Hours a Week (bloomberg.com) 150

China will forbid minors from gaming more than three hours most weeks of the year, imposing their strictest controls yet over entertainment for youths in a blow to the world's largest mobile gaming arena. From a report: Gaming platforms from Tencent to NetEase can henceforth only offer online gaming to minors from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Fridays, weekends and public holidays, state news agency Xinhua reported, citing a notice by the National Press and Publication Administration. The new rules, which limit teen playing time to three hours most weeks of the year, is a major step-up from a previous restriction set in 2019 of 1.5 hours per day, most days.

The escalating restrictions on Tencent's biggest business are likely to spook investors that had cautiously returned to Chinese stocks in recent days, exploring bargains after a raft of regulatory probes into areas from online commerce to data security and ride-hailing ignited a trillion-dollar selloff in past weeks. "Three hours per week is too tight. Such a policy will have negative impact on Tencent too," Steven Leung, an executive director at UOB Kay Hian (Hong Kong) said. "I thought regulatory measures would take a break gradually but it's not stopping at all. It will hurt the nascent tech rebound for sure."

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China Slashes Kids' Gaming Time To Just Three Hours a Week

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  • I guess (Score:5, Funny)

    by Agent Fletcher ( 624427 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:05AM (#61744291)
    I guess China doesn't want their population to turn into a bunch of fat lazy losers like American kids.
    • And you think the world would be better off if you had a government that controlled every aspect of your life?

      Who to vote for?
      How much work and how much play?
      How many kids you should have?
      What is proper thinking and what thoughts are wrong?
      What to believe in and what not to believe?

      Sounds awfully like a sect + totalitarian dicatorship.

      • False dichotomy.

        The current system is clearly broken, I'd subscribe to half those things.

        • by jm007 ( 746228 )

          not a false dichotomy.... either you choose how to live your life or someone else does it for you

          cue the pedantics who will then split hairs to show how wrong I am

      • And you think the world would be better off if you had a government that controlled every aspect of your life?

        Oh, but you already do, if you live in a western "democracy". The methods of your government as opposed to China's are just different.

        Who to vote for?

        It's either one party or the other. Both do the same, they just do it differently. Or how many of you voted for raising the production, but not the wages, since the 70s?

        How much work and how much play?

        You work pretty much the entire waking time, givr or take a meal or two, and the 8 o'clock movie time.

        The rest you play.

        How many kids you should have?

        That's easy: as many as you can afford.

        What is proper thinking and what thoughts are wrong?

        Did you by any chance follow the Assange "trial"?

      • Is the govt having the control any worse that giving free reign to corporations to do it?
    • Yeah, they shouldn't do anything like the Americans do. Our worthless US kids turn into worthless US workers that are 3 times as productive as glorious, obedient Chinese workers. Clearly an outmoded, decadent civilization ripe for replacement.
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      They don't want to end up with spoiled leaders without attention spans who golf all day and throw KFC at news they don't like.

      • Right, because Trump was raised on video games. In the 50's.
      • Umm, so the guy in charge of China that's gets offended because someone said he looked like Poo Bear? Seems like a great leader to me. Right up there with Biden and Trump.

  • Priorities (Score:5, Informative)

    by dlleigh ( 313922 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:06AM (#61744295)

    Fewer hours for video games means more time for learning Xi Jinping Thought.

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

  • by Fworg64 ( 6172828 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:07AM (#61744299)
    in Pokemon Unite.
  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:10AM (#61744311)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:Cute (Score:5, Interesting)

      by RobinH ( 124750 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:15AM (#61744333) Homepage
      They're controlling this at the company level. They have enforced age verification, allowed play times, etc. This isn't enforced at the household level. But it only applies to online games. Are they going to force all games to connect to an online service to authenticate before playing?
      • Re:Cute (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Aristos Mazer ( 181252 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:39AM (#61744439)

        > Are they going to force all games to connect to an online service to authenticate before playing?

        I think that would be a reasonable expectation of their next step given all that we've seen before now.

      • by indytx ( 825419 )

        . . . But it only applies to online games. Are they going to force all games to connect to an online service to authenticate before playing?

        I hear you Micro$oft.

      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        The games developers already shot themselves in the foot with this one.

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        It could be that they specifically target online games given how predatory those have become. Most of what is labeled a "game" today is essentially a "click this button for a small dopamine pill" hamster wheel.

        Restricted playing times eat that business model, while you can put quite a bit of gameplay into 90 minutes.

      • But it only applies to online games.

        So there will be a new market for games you play offline all day, and upload your progress during the 3 hours per week you are allowed online.

    • by skam240 ( 789197 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:17AM (#61744343)

      You know your power is starting to slip when you start making laws you can't enforce.

      That's still a bit of a work in progress but they're getting there https://www.theverge.com/2021/... [theverge.com]

      • Trivial to enforce - this is for ONLINE games only. So you control the companies and demand that they enforce it, and if the companies won't do it you just block them.

    • Re:Cute (Score:4, Interesting)

      by nucrash ( 549705 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:19AM (#61744349)

      I can tell you that this is easier to enforce than you think. While there are going to be some that find ways to work around, what they will do is create online profiles for each kid/family and link them all together for easy tracking. They will want the gaming companies to work together to prove allocated times don't exceed the preset determined limit.

      You're biggest issue is going to be offline gaming. Though they will probably just find ways to limit access to games offline.

      I am not agreeing with what they are doing, just pointing out how I would implement a system of checks and balances if I had their amount of control.
      Don't ask what I would do to subvert their levels of control though. They have the potential of creating some of the most exceptional hackers though.

      • It also does not really matter. This law informs parents on what is acceptable. The parents will take it from here, and like most child focused laws, be the enforcer on what their kid is doing.

    • Re:Cute (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ljw1004 ( 764174 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @10:01AM (#61744539)

      You know your power is starting to slip when you start making laws you can't enforce.

      As already mentioned, this current law is for online games only so it's easy to enforce (with sanctions on the online gaming companies).

      As for offline gaming, I already enforce about the same time limit for my kids (5yo and 8yo) on ipads, mac, windows and xbox, through parental control software offered by Apple and Microsoft. I think it'd be easy for China to mandate that Apple and Microsoft turn on these controls by default for all users, and only let them be turned off by tying your user account to your China state-issued ID with age verification.

      • Im 42 - Im glad my parents didnt restrict my video game play when I was younger. I dont think it harmed my development in any way. I guess iPhones and tablets probably amplify doing it alone, and we were always in a group playing nintendo or whatever, so I dont mean to speak to how you guys should parent your kids or anything.
        • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

          Im 42 - Im glad my parents didnt restrict my video game play when I was younger. I dont think it harmed my development in any way. I guess iPhones and tablets probably amplify doing it alone, and we were always in a group playing nintendo or whatever, so I dont mean to speak to how you guys should parent your kids or anything.

          I'm 47. When I wanted to play games, I had to go to the library and rent books of source code for games and type them in (ZX Spectrum / Basic). We had only a dirt cheap computer and couldn't afford a tape drive. Therefore, my gaming was all inherently very educational. The only restriction was that if I wanted to game, I had to first type in a "maths exercises" program that my dad authored and my mum wrote out by hand, and do 15mins of maths.

          What's available on ipad+youtube now is backed by a multi-billion

          • I am 37 and played lots of video games as a kid. Both in groups and solo. Probably more solo time because many of the games I enjoyed were single player anyway.

            None of that prevented me from getting friends, getting an education, working at a career, owning a home or meeting and marrying my wife.

            This just looks like state control where it is unnecessary.

            P.s. my friends and I also rode bicycles, went swimming and made up random games outside. I guess kids aren't allowed outside without supervision anymore. P

          • by BranMan ( 29917 )

            I'm 58. When I wanted to play computer games I had to write them myself, type them into a teletype terminal, punch them onto paper tape, load that onto the computer, and play be hitting teletype keys and have results printed out in ascii.

            But, you are welcome on my lawn - it's a nice looking lawn

    • Do the neighbors rat out your kids for playing more than three hours?

      This would be no different than in Texas where there is a web site for people to report on women who have had an abortion [chron.com]. While not state funded, this serves the same purpose: private citizens ratting out their neighbors to the government.

      You know, because freedom.
    • You know your power is starting to slip when you start making laws you can't enforce.

      Did you even look into the law? Hint: There's nothing in this law about people, and everything about forcing corporations to simply limit service. Something which they actively do since such laws have been in place for over 3 years already.

  • Sound more like they're reigning in Tencent rather than them being worried about the kids... if that was the case, they'd have made it a matter of screen time and not gaming...

    Granted, screentme would conflict with office drones. Can't have that. But surely, if they were worried about health, social media and streaming would also be part of this.

    • Controlling "screen time" is about 1000x harder to enforce than shutting down centralized gaming services outside specified hours.
  • by sinij ( 911942 )
    This is what government making decision "for greater good' look like when it reaches its logical conclusion. You have seen Chinese Communist Party dictating how many children you can have, you have seen them discouraging taking on excessive debt, you have seen them restricting minor's screen time. You might even agree with some of theses actions.

    However, one thing is clear - Chinese people living in China have no self-determination due to lack of personal freedoms.
    • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:35AM (#61744423) Journal

      This is what government making decision "for greater good' look like when it reaches its logical conclusion. You have seen Chinese Communist Party dictating how many children you can have, you have seen them discouraging taking on excessive debt, you have seen them restricting minor's screen time. You might even agree with some of theses actions. However, one thing is clear - Chinese people living in China have no self-determination due to lack of personal freedoms.

      Yep. All for the greater good. Like suppressing "misinformation" ...

    • You have seen Chinese Communist Party dictating how many children you can have, you have seen them discouraging taking on excessive debt, you have seen them restricting minor's screen time.

      While not a defense of China, too often I see people makes comments like this from a US perspective largely with the thematic message of, 'look at us, we're so much better in the US than those oppressed Chinese people'. Well let me tell you that the only folks in the US not subjected to the same authoritarian policy that you mention is those who can afford to buy those freedoms. Here in American, freedoms are only free for those who can afford them.

      • What are you going on about? What freedom do I have that a homeless person doesn't?

        The only reason I have anything is because I am willing to WORK. Go figure.

        The homeless person is just as free as me to get a job. They are just as free as me to stand on the street corner with a sign. They are free to go to the parks and beaches and all those other lovely places that don't cost money. Same as me.

        I'm not seeing how poor people are less free. I mean, sure, we are all "wages slaves" I suppose. Not sure how you

        • I'm not seeing how poor people are less free.

          Well lets go back to your initial comment.

          dictating how many children you can have

          We provide a minimum wage and social programs to support families, but they don't provide enough support to make successful families. You're free to get a job as you say but you're not automatically free to get a job that will successfully provide for a large family should you want one.

          discouraging taking on excessive debt

          If you're poor, you're not free to get a proper loan because you aren't inherently free to acquire a job that pays you enough to get the loan.

          China controls freedom through polic

      • by sinij ( 911942 )

        Well let me tell you that the only folks in the US not subjected to the same authoritarian policy that you mention is those who can afford to buy those freedoms.

        Essentially, that was my point, only written in a way that would make it harder to -1 Disagree mod.

    • by Tom ( 822 )

      Not too long ago, a large part of the chinese population was living in extreme poverty.

      Don't compare chinese of today to americans of today. Compare them to chinese of yesterday. Because when you live in extreme poverty, all those freedoms that you have on paper are worth very little, because you can't make use of them.

      Lifting a few hundred millions out of poverty is a huge success. No western nation has accomplished anything on that scale.

      I'm not saying that it's a sacrifice worth making or something - tha

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Monday August 30, 2021 @09:32AM (#61744413)

    This is no different than protecting kids from too much sugar or potatoe chips.

  • Internet connected multiplayer pinball machines.

      This is a very feasable thing with modern tech, and it's still not a video game.

  • child "slave" labor? Is Nike behind this?

    https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/ilab/ilab20200930
    • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

      child "slave" labor? Is Nike behind this?

      https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/r... [dol.gov]

      Well not according to the page you linked so why ask if Nike is responsible without evidence?

  • They are limiting minors' access to online gaming to one hour on weekends and holidays.

  • All that will happen is that kids will play games offline, and only go online only when they want to purchase something. Games that do not offer offline play will tend to be unplayed by minors.
  • Because, you know... playing is the natural form of learning.

    I want kids to play as much as they enjoy. (And us to make it as enjoyable as possible, without employing unhealthy addicting methods.)

    But I want them to play useless things that don't teach them anything as little as possible! (Wasting e.g. 1/4 of your life is functionally equivalent to dying 1/4 of your natural lifespan earlier. And just as harmful. Imagine the resources we pour into preventing people from dying early. But we do nothing against

  • That's not fun, that's work. Is that banned as well?

  • To shutdown the libtard echo chamber
    • by xalqor ( 6762950 )

      When you use a word like "libtard" to disrespect people who have a different opinion than you, while suggesting that the government should restrict their speech that you don't like... it might mean you've been in an echo chamber too.

      Maybe too much negative sensationalism by foreign and domestic trolls succeeded in distracting you from the idea that, in the land of the free and the home of the brave, the values of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness are for EVERYONE.

      Let's make genuine speech easy to

  • So every kid in China is going to be playing online games during the -same- three hours a week? What about China's new three child policy? Does that mean a family would have to buy three consoles, one for each?

    How much extra capacity will be required by the game owners to deal with this three hour load?

    • No silly, each child will get their own profile. Not sure how they will stop siblings from stealing each others game time though. Maybe make the child stand in front of a camera for rental scan to verify it is them at the gaming device.

      This would all make more sense to me if I understood the actual goal of the state here. Video gaming is a hobby. It shouldn't be preventing you from working or maintaining personal relationships or even enjoying other aspects of life.

      I don't know how Chinese schools operate a

    • by Anil ( 7001 )

      Step 1: Wait in login queue for multiplayer game for 90% of allowed time, due to weekend usage spike.
      Step 2: lose quickly because no practice at game.
      Step 3: revolt against gov't.
      (or alternate Step 3: only be allowed to play government "let's work together" co-op lame propaganda game).

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