INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Microsoft is following Apple and Google lead with today launch of per-app and per-game time limits in its parental control software
Already, the company allows parents to limit screen time across Windows 10, Xbox One and Android via the Microsoft Launcher
However, it hadn''t yet allowed parents to limit the amount of time a child could spend in a specific app or game, as its competitors
do.
Instead, its existing controls allowed parents only to dole out a set amount of hours of screen time
Parents could choose to either leave the time up to the kids to manage, or limit it at the device level — like, only allowing one hour of
Xbox time but permitting more screen time on the PC, for example.
However, the current trend in screen time management is not to approach
all screen time as unproductive and unhealthy
Instead, it about configuring limits on the more addictive apps and games that eat up increasing amounts of children time, while permitting
educational tools to have fewer limits.
For older kids and teens, social media apps like TikTok or Instagram could be the culprit, while
younger kids may just be spending too much time &hanging out& in virtual worlds like Roblox and Fortnite
Problems on this front have gotten pretty bad
Mobile games are under fire for using gambling tactics like loot boxes to engage children
And Fortnite is now the subject of a lawsuit that claims that, in part, the game addictive nature is due to its use slot machine-like
mechanics and variable reward systems, which manipulate children brains.
Without being able to limit these apps directly, kids may end up
using all of their allotted screen time on just the one app or game they&re obsessed with at the moment.
Apple had already allowed per-app
time limits with the launch of its screen time controls in iOS 12
And Google more recently updated its own Family Link software, now preinstalled on new Android devices, to include a similar feature.
With
today update, Microsoft is now on board, too.
The new app and game limits parents set will apply across Windows 10, Xbox and Android
devices running Microsoft Launcher
In other words, kids can''t get more game time just by switching devices.
The controls also allow parents to offer more screen time on
certain days — like weekends, for instance — than others.
To use this feature, parents will need to create a family group and make
Microsoft accounts for all the kids.
Once enabled, kids will get a warning about their screen time 15 minutes before the limit is reached,
and then again at five minutes
Because kids will often beg for a few more minutes, Microsoft made it easy for parents to grant or deny more time via email or via a
Microsoft Launcher notification on their own Android phone.
The per-app time limits are launching today in preview within Microsoft existing
family settings.
Ultimately, our goal is for the app and game limits feature to provide flexible and customizable tools to meet each family
unique needs,& the company explains in an announcement
&You as parents know what best for your children — no technology can ever replace that — but we&re hoping these tools can help you to
strike the right balance,& it says.