There is a war raging right now in China, and itâs against online addiction. The latest recruits arenât doctors or bureaucrats, but parents.
Starting next month, a new âparental watch projectâ will go into effect that will require online gaming companies to have a web page and call center hotline for parents to monitor their childrenâs gaming habits.
According to the Peopleâs Daily Online, internet game service providers will authorize parents to limit or ban their children from playing. This comes as the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences pegs the number of the countryâs teenage âinternet addictionsâ at 33 million.
According to the Ministry of Public Security (via The Register), children shouldnât be playing online games for more than two hours a week or spend more than US1.50 on online gaming services.
âThe kids can easily use a fake adult ID to get back into the game. They can just hide from their parents,â Liu Kun, a 27-year-old gamer in Beijing, told China Daily
This is just another measure in which the Chinese government is cracking down on online gaming. The country already has âinternet boot campsâ. One clinic even uses shock therapy and even fatal beatings to ween kids off the internet.
https://lastchance.cc/chinese-youth-dies-at-boot-camp-5652950%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Last summer, a group of teenagers escaped from a Chinese internet boot camp, only to find they didnât have enough money to cover the cab fare.
https://lastchance.cc/chinese-internet-addicts-stage-daring-boot-camp-escape-5558229%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
China to launch parental watch project to fight online games addiction [Peopleâs Daily Online] [image: Getty]