The authorities in #China have today announced that for, anyone under 18 years old, they're to be limited to playing online games to only 3 hours a week! Plus only these 3 hours: 8 til 9 pm on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. There will be Chinese teenagers flipping out right now!
This, apparently, will be enforced in #China by making gamers use real name registration and require face scans.
It's been announced that there will be inspections of game companies in conjunction with #China's new 3 hours per week limit on gaming for those under 18. There had previously been limits but now there are only three specific hours per week in which youths can play games.
So, from now on, if you want to know precisely what every 15 year old in #China is doing at 8pm on Friday night. Now you do.
The National Press and Publication Administration made the announcement said to be in response to concern re gaming addiction in #China. Regulators said gaming companies must ensure they're using real name verification to stop those under 18 gaming outside those specific 3 hours.
At least one parent of a teenager working in our office actually cheered out aloud at this news when we heard it. You still can't wipe the smile off her face. ;-)
It is unclear how foreign gaming companies might be regulated to make them also follow these rules when Chinese kids and teenagers play their games or even if there will be an attempt to make them? Either way, just three specific gaming hours in #China per week! Wow!
I wonder if other counties might consider restrictions following #China’s new 3 hour gaming limit for kids and teens? BTW VPNs won’t necessarily come to the rescue of kids here unless they want to play foreign games (which they might do now)? Could hurt China’s gaming companies.
For those asking how it can be enforced, gaming companies will be made to require real name registration with official IDs. Some will use face scanning as extra security. They won't want to get busted allowing minors to game outside the official 3 hours b/c they'd be shut down.
One work around would seem to be to get a VPN and play overseas games. For this reason #China's gaming companies will be spitting chips that their under 18 gamers can only play from 8 til 9pm Friday, Saturday & Sunday nights.(BTW not sure how many teenagers had VPNs before this?)
Another work around might be to get an adult to log you in? To tell the truth though I think that most parents in #China wouldn't do this.
Maybe the smart buys are in shares for companies producing VPNs or single user games not online. ;-)
There is, of course, an obvious solution: bring back Galaxian!
OK... what about Galaga?
BTW, for all of us living in #China, if there is a sudden surge at 8pm on Friday night, draining every little ounce of nearby bandwidth sucking the juice out of the internet like we've never seen before... we'll know why. ;-)
Is the little gaggle of apologists attacking me over this thread really that stooopid or really that disingenuous? I’m clearly neither saying the 3 hour limit is good nor bad. That’s for others to decide. I’ve pointed out: some parents have been welcoming it. Disingenuous wins?
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
#China TV overhaul announced today banning mass "vote him/her off the island" type voting. Only a live audience can make selections. Shows training young performers to be stars: banned. Actors with "incorrect" political views: banned. "Effeminate" style male actors: banned.
There was a popular idol talent show here in #China which required fans to buy sponsored products in order to vote for their favourite young star. This led to some fans buying and then throwing out massive amounts of yoghurt. This type of voting is now prohibited.
"Sissy" men, "vulgar influencers" and those with "lapsed morals" have been banned from television shows in #China. Programme makers have been urged to steer away from "abnormal aesthetics" and inflating the pay of stars.
#China’s Party-controlled press is now furiously busy scrubbing its reports regarding Swiss biologist “Wilson Edwards” said to be embroiled in a @WHO#covid scandal however...
The statement from #Switzerland’s Embassy in #China regarding “Wilson Edwards”...
A Google search shows the @globaltimesnews piece aaaaaand the page now...
Canadian Robert Shellenberg has lost an appeal & faces execution in #China for trying to smuggle drugs to #Australia. The Canadian Ambassador said it was "no coincidence" his verdict was announced while the extradition hearing of #China's Meng Wanzhou is on in #Canada.
Shellenberg first received a 15-year prison sentence after being charge with drug smuggling. However - following the detention of #Huawei's Meng Wanzhou in #Canada on a #US extradition request - the Canadian was "re-tried" and then instead given the death penalty.
The Shellenberg case - along with the cases involving Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig - have been described as hostage diplomacy on the part of #Beijing. China's foreign affairs spokespeople have themselves linked the Spavor & Kovrig cases to #Huawei's Meng Wanzhou.
There have been threats of violence and personal family-targeted abuse send to the private phones of those working in the foreign media as part of this clearly-orchestrated campaign of harassment, especially focusing on the BBC. This followed reporting on the #Henan floods.
You have to ask why organs of the Communist Party are doing this given that the reporting I’ve seen would appear to engender sympathy for the people of #Henan. What it would it would seem to show is that there’s something to hide or something to distract from there? #China
Should read: There have been threats of violence + personal family-targeted abuse sent to the private phones of those working in the foreign media as part of a clearly-orchestrated campaign of harassment, especially focusing on the BBC. This followed reporting on #Henan’s floods.
There’s been an orchestrated campaign against the foreign media in #Zhengzhou, fuelled by the Communist Youth League. So the strategy to try to make it a patriotic duty to harass those doing real reporting to distract from criticism of bad infrastructure not coping with flooding?
The Communist Party is very good at manufacturing “outrage” in #China and social media is used because then it can all be chalked up to the supposedly spontaneous response of “netizens” whoever the hell they are.
Kind of amazing how the “netizens” who are blocked from seeing the BBC because their government doesn’t trust them suddenly have access to the BBC when it’s time for them to “express their anger”.