Times Colonist

Tech-addiction fears for children

Shareholde­rs urge Apple to limit screen time, but experts say responsibi­lity likely to rest with family

- MICHAEL OLIVEIRA

TORONTO

Consumers shouldn’t count on Apple redesignin­g its phones and tablets to make them less addictive for children, say experts, who caution that good parenting might be the only solution to keep children from staring too long at screens.

While two of Apple’s biggest shareholde­rs are pushing for new features to help limit damaging screen time for children, tech observers say there’s no easy fix and the responsibi­lity will remain with parents to do what’s best for their kids.

“I think the only area that control can come from is going to have to be direct parental limits,” said Aimee Morrison, an associate professor at the University of Waterloo who studies technology’s impact on culture.

The latest debate over how much tech companies can prevent addiction was spawned by an open letter sent by New York-based Jana Partners LLC and the California State Teachers’ Retirement System, which collective­ly own $2 billion US of Apple stock.

“Apple can play a defining role in signalling to the industry that paying special attention to the health and developmen­t of the next generation is both good business and the right thing to do,” the letter read.

“We believe addressing this issue now by offering parents more tools and choices could enhance Apple’s business and increase demand for its products.”

Apple responded by saying it already has a number of parental controls built into its iPhones and iPads and “new features and enhancemen­ts [are] planned for the future.”

There is still no consensus on whether children can be truly addicted to screens, but there’s no question that “excessive use” of phones and tablets can affect physical and mental health, said Matthew Johnson director of education for MediaSmart­s, a non-profit organizati­on based in Ottawa that focuses on media literacy programs.

Johnson would like to see Apple implement a tool that would set a “usage curfew” to limit a device’s capabiliti­es in the evening when a child should be getting ready for bed. Controls should be more than a simple on-off switch, he said, so parents can adjust access as they see fit.

But consumers can’t rely on technology companies to make devices that are risk-free and don’t require good parenting, Johnson said.

“It’s important that [parental control features] not be something that is seen as a complete solution. What’s really important is, as our kids are getting older, we gradually give them more and more responsibi­lity,” he said.

“What would be very helpful is a feature where we’re not setting really strict limits as parents, we’re not directly supervisin­g them, but they don’t have total freedom, either. We’re able to maybe put limits where we think they’re necessary, we’re able to give them reminders, and we might be able to set that curfew period.”

Even one of the iPhone’s early designers now has reservatio­ns about the device’s addictive qualities — for children and adults. Tony Fadell, who left Apple and went to co-design the Nest digital thermostat, tweeted that “device addiction is real” and “we need to know where the line is and when we’ve crossed over to addiction.”

He suggested “screen time rules, living in the moment, screen-free meals, relearning analog objects like books and writing and sketching, tech-free days for the family to be together” as possible strategies to combat screen addiction.

While some people have questioned whether phones and tablets are any more alluring than television or video games were to kids in the earliest days of those technologi­es, Morrison said portabilit­y is the distinctiv­e factor.

“In the first golden age of television, in the 1950s when homes were getting these sets in the living room — and they received three channels — parents could walk in the room and turn it off. With early video-gaming systems as well, the consoles were hooked up to the television in the main room,” she said.

“The thing with an iPhone or an iPad is it goes everywhere with us. You used to be able to rip your kid out from in front of the TV and say: ‘Come on, we’re going grocery shopping,’ but now they won’t even get in the car without saying: ‘Can I play with your phone?’ I think it’s the scale of the use and the ubiquity and pervasiven­ess.”

Even if Apple doesn’t have a direct responsibi­lity to parents, it’s not surprising that the company quickly committed to doing more, said Neil Bearse, director of marketing at Queen’s University’s Smith School of Business.

Apple has long marketed itself as a company that believes in family values and that creates “safe” products parents can trust, Bearse said.

“[Former Apple CEO] Steve Jobs went on the record essentiall­y to say there will never be pornograph­y in the App Store,” Bearse says.

“You could come at it with a cynical commercial lens of saying they want to continue the iPhoneuser pipeline to be as young as they can get. For a parent who’s debating which phone should I give to my kids, the familyfrie­ndly angle is definitely in line with those values.”

 ??  ?? Apple chief executive officer Tim Cook unveils new iPhones. Two major investors in the company want Apple to add new features to iPhones and tablets that would limit the amount of time children spend staring at a screen.
Apple chief executive officer Tim Cook unveils new iPhones. Two major investors in the company want Apple to add new features to iPhones and tablets that would limit the amount of time children spend staring at a screen.

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