Tanya Byron, Head Of The Government's Gaming Review

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Topic started: Fri, 26 Oct 2007 17:56
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tyrion
Joined 14 Oct 1999
1786 comments
Fri, 26 Oct 2007 17:56
She does seem to ave a fairly balanced view of this review. Let's hope the people who receive her recommendations are similarly balanced!
config
Joined 3 Sep 1999
2088 comments
Fri, 26 Oct 2007 20:06
I've seen a few of her "House of Tiny Tearaways" - I'm a parent, so I'm interested to see how bad it can get with kids (and to tackle fixing the problem)

The most encouraging thing about the show (in the context of games/internet content and kids) is that 9 times out of 10, when these kids go off the rails it's the parents that are to blame.

I'm in no doubt that this is the case with kids playing mature games. Tanya's suggestion that the rating system is confusing is interesting, though I'm more inclined to believe that many parents just don't care, at best because they still think games are aimed at kids, at worst because they don't give a fsck
tyrion
Joined 14 Oct 1999
1786 comments
Sat, 27 Oct 2007 11:45
config wrote:
Tanya's suggestion that the rating system is confusing is interesting, though I'm more inclined to believe that many parents just don't care, at best because they still think games are aimed at kids, at worst because they don't give a fsck

Well, we both know someone who was of the opinion that they were a difficulty rating, not a content rating. And she's a loving, caring mother.

Her: "He's so smart, he's on to the 18 games already and he's only 13!"
Me: "Umm, you do know that's a content rating like on DVDs?"
Her: "What?!?!?"

When you think about it, it's not too strange a conclusion to come to, all the time they have been buying entertainment for their kids, the toys, board games, jigsaws and whatever are rated by age on difficulty or small parts. Now videogames are rated on content and age suitability? It's a bit of a leap if you don't realise.

Of course there are those parents who think "He's quiet, I don't care what he's watching." They are the ones who should be slapped with a £5K fine, and not just for giving age-inappropriate games to their kids.
hollywooda
Joined 27 Jun 2006
663 comments
Sun, 28 Oct 2007 01:05
i would.... non violently....of course..hee hee....
zoydwheeler
Joined 19 Sep 2003
204 comments
Sun, 28 Oct 2007 09:52
Thanks for that contribution there! Really enlightening...
hollywooda
Joined 27 Jun 2006
663 comments
Sun, 28 Oct 2007 11:14
sorry, i didnt think of those people out there without a sense of humor, its called a little joke, look it up....
zoydwheeler
Joined 19 Sep 2003
204 comments
Sun, 28 Oct 2007 11:35
It's just a s**t and old joke, is all. And, for the record, probably would.
hollywooda
Joined 27 Jun 2006
663 comments
Mon, 29 Oct 2007 11:59
But!...you said?... whatever.....



(yer, i do like a Milf)
Andronix
Anonymous
Tue, 30 Oct 2007 22:39
Well done Spong for a genuine and interesting exclusive.

So much gamer news is recycled PR crap. This was a good interview that asked some pertinent questions.

I remember feeling sick of hearing Tanya's name because there was a few weeks when BBC Three seemed to be showing her programme non-stop.Anyway she sounds fairly balanced. She says her kids play games.
From what she said, It may be that she just has a universal age rating system (BBFC) and tries to make parents more aware of their responsibilities. Although games for adults might no longer be called games?!

well done.

Andronix
Playthree.net
Peej
Anonymous
Tue, 6 Nov 2007 14:05
Nice to see Dr Byron putting her side of things and not being misquoted and reported as head nanny in a nanny state looking to impose harsh restrictions on the games industry.

Time and time again the interview mentioned the most important point in all this, that responsibility lies with parents to actually make sure that they know and understand what games are about, how the ratings work, and if need be, tell their kids a firm "no" when it comes to them wanting to play games or access internet sites that are unsuitable for their age group.

With consoles (the 360 in particular) soon being patched to limit time children spend playing games, it does at least look like the industry is trying to do its bit. The weak links in all of this are still largely the parents.

pjmaybe - allaboutthegames.net
reddawn
Joined 28 Nov 2007
1 comments
Wed, 28 Nov 2007 21:02
Could all this just be a front? It sounds mightily political to me. Looking into my crystal ball I see little positive result. Besides what can England do, when the virtual world is global?

The Byron chick could be well cast as a sorcerer's apprentice in a modern video game!

Pretty face, media savvy, the instrument of some gov PR initiative or other, (echoes of "Yes Minister") and some hidden agenda ... somewhere? Where I wonder? Who wants to do what and to whom? Could there be scope for some kind of tax? A sinecure in the shape of an online video Game Tsar?

It would be interesting to take a closer look?

The risk is not that dangerous games exist but rather that upstart initiatives irrupt, run out of control and wind up threatening or actually damaging fundamental liberties.

The online world is a new model, using outdated tools to try to measure it is an anachronism. The phenomenon is too young, it needs to evolve, and that may well be one of the key findings of Doc Byron's review. It is like trying to control the telephone! Daft! It is up to parents. She might usefully set up compulsory evening courses for recalcitrant parents. Now there's a thought!

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