Panel Urges Limit on Mobile for Kids
A Japanese government panel has called on parents and schools to help limit the use of mobile phones by children to prevent them from accessing “harmful” information on websites. These measures are necessary to “protect children from harmful information and other negative influence involving the use of mobile phones” including “crimes and bullying,” the report said. It called for limiting mobile phone for children use just to voice calls.
Via AFP:
The advisory council on education made the proposal to Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda as children become more prone to crimes involving dating websites and bullying on Internet school bulletin boards. The panel said it would urge “parents, schools and other people concerned to cooperate in preventing elementary and junior high school students from using mobile phones unless it is necessary.”
These measures are necessary to “protect children from harmful information and other negative influence involving the use of mobile phones” including “crimes and bullying,” the report said. Press reports have linked some crimes by children to dating websites. “It is true that the use of mobile phones causes various problems,” Fukuda told reporters. “I think the panel has made timely discussions on the problem.”
He added: “First of all, I wonder if there is any need for children to possess mobile phones.”
While about a third of Japanese primary school students aged 7-12 use mobiles, by the time they get to high school that figure rises to 96 percent, according to a government survey last December. There are fears for students’ safety as only about one percent of them have blocks on potentially harmful material, meaning they could reveal personal information, making them prey for fraudsters and paedophiles.
Talk about throwing out the baby with the bathwater! When we consider all of the positive potential of mobile handsets designed for kids, it would seem to make more sense to manage –Aggressively — the ‘threat’ as opposed to obliterate all of the obvious advantages. No doubt the operators will be making their ‘value-add’ case, considering all three have vested significant resources to this market niche. Lets hope that a balanced logic prevails going forward. Update: Like this one for starters!