China Agency Proposes Limiting Kid's Daily Phone Use

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The Facts

  • The Cyberspace Administration of China has unveiled draft legislation to limit 16- and 17-year-olds to two hours per day on smartphones, eight to 15-year-olds to one hour, and those under eight to 40 minutes. Minors would also lose phone access between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.

  • While children under three would be limited to songs and other audio material, those 12 and older would have access to educational and news content. Parents would also be given control to moderate what their children see and permit internet providers to show age-appropriate content.


The Spin

Pro-China narrative

Beijing has been on the right path on the issue of phone usage, and this proposal will only further its commitment to protecting children from inappropriate online content and smartphone addiction. While many parents have lauded previous "minor mode" initiatives, they have also asked for broader and more efficient tools to help monitor their kids' digital environment. This is a win for public health and society at large.

Anti-China narrative

Previous government measures by China, which leads the world with the largest internet user population, have had limited success. The issue of psychological obsessions with the internet and video games is far more complex than simply limiting content time, a policy that today's youth are very good at bypassing regardless of what the law says. It's likely that this draconian move is another attempt to influence the behavior of younger people as China faces a sluggish economy and demographic crisis.


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