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Japan
urges limiting kids' cell phones
Yuri Kageyama
Associated Press
May 27, 2008
TOKYO (AP) — Japanese
youngsters are getting so addicted to Internet-linking
cell phones that the government is starting a program
warning parents and schools to limit their use among
children.
The government is worried about how elementary and
junior high school students are getting sucked into
cyberspace crimes, spending long hours exchanging mobile
e-mail and suffering other negative effects of cell
phone overuse, Masaharu Kuba, a government official
overseeing the initiative, said Tuesday.
"Japanese parents are giving cell phones to their
children without giving it enough thought," he said. "In
Japan, cell phones have become an expensive toy."
The recommendations have been submitted from an
education reform panel to Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda's
administration, and were approved this week.
The panel is also asking Japanese makers to develop cell
phones with only the talking function, and GPS, or
global positioning system, a satellite-navigation
feature that can help ensure a child's safety.
About a third of Japanese sixth graders have cell
phones, while 60 percent of ninth graders have them,
according to the education ministry.
Most mobile phones in Japan are sophisticated gadgets
offering high-speed Internet access called 3G, for
"third-generation."
But the panel said better filtering programming is
needed for Internet access to protect children.
Some youngsters are spending hours at night on e-mail
with their friends. One fad is "the 30 minute rule," in
which a child who doesn't respond to e-mail within half
an hour gets targeted and picked on by other
schoolmates.
Other youngsters have become victims of Internet crimes.
In one case, children sent in their own snapshots to a
Web site and then ended up getting threatened for money,
Kuba said.
Cell phones tend to be more personal tools than personal
computers. Parents find that what their children are
doing with them are increasingly difficult to monitor,
Kuba said.
Some Japanese children commute long distances by trains
and buses to schools and cram-schools and parents rely
on cell phones to keep in touch with their children.
Parents typically pay about 4,000 yen ($39) a month for
cell phone fees per child.
Japan boasts a relatively low crime rate compared to
other industrialized nations, but some people are
concerned that the Internet could be exploited for
serious crimes.
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