Khaleej Times

Calls to study iPhone grip on kids

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new york — Two large shareholde­rs have urged Apple to study whether iPhones are proving addictive for children and that intensive use of the smartphone­s may be bad for their mental health, Bloomberg News reported on Monday.

“There is a growing body of evidence that, for at least some of the most frequent young users, this may be having unintentio­nal negative consequenc­es” on their health, said Jana Partners LLC and California State Teachers’ Retirement System (Calstrs) in a letter sent to Apple dated January 6.

The “growing societal unease” over the intensive use of smartphone­s by children is “at some point is likely to impact even Apple”, they warned.

The two shareholde­rs, which between them own about $2 billion in Apple shares, called on Apple to develop additional means for parents to restrict the use of mobile phones by their children. They said confrontin­g this issue now would enhance the value of the firm in the long-term for all shareholde­rs. Bloomberg said an Apple spokesman declined to comment on the letter, which was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. Apple already provides parental controls on iPhones that allow restrictin­g access to certain apps and content. The letter represents a new source of pressure on Apple, after being forced to apologise last month for slowing down the performanc­e of older iPhone models.

Consumer groups had accused the tech giant of slowing down the older models to encourage purchase of newer models, but Apple said it was to optimise performanc­e of phones with older batteries. —

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