Confirmed: Xbox 360 Family Timer is go
Microsoft, the Parent Teacher Association and Jerry Rice (yes, that Jerry Rice) have teamed up in an effort to confirm the rumored Xbox 360 Family Timer! Okay, that's not exactly why they've banded together, but the feature is still confirmed.Continuing their pro-family interests, Microsoft, the PTA and Mr. Rice all reinforced their commitment to family entertainment and revealed a new 360 Family Timer will be released this December (Fall update anyone?) allowing parents to take control of their kids' game time. The timer is a new tool for parents to use both as part of Microsoft's "Is Your Family Set?" and the PTA's PACT campaigns. You can read all the details in one lengthy press release that is viewable after the break. So ... Jerry Rice huh?
Microsoft, PTA and Super Bowl Champion Jerry Rice Announce New Tools to Help Parents Manage Kids' Interactive Media Use
Xbox 360 Debuts Video Game Industry's First and Only "Family Timer."
Washington, D.C. - Nov. 7, 2007 - Microsoft Corp., The Parent Teacher Association (PTA) and Super Bowl Champion Jerry Rice joined forces today to unveil new parent tools as part of the second year of the "Safety is no game. Is your family set?" campaign. They include a "PACT," a family contract intended to foster family discussion surrounding screen time guidelines, as well as a new parental control feature, the Xbox 360 Family Timer. The Family Timer will enable parents for the first time to set the appropriate amount of gaming and entertainment time for their kids, on a daily or weekly basis.
"As a leader in interactive entertainment, it's Microsoft's responsibility to provide parents with tools they can use to manage their children's video gaming and online experiences, and we have made that a priority from the very start," said Robbie Bach, president of Entertainment and Devices Division at Microsoft.
Through this all-new educational partnership, millions of PTA members nationwide will receive information on the fundamentals of the campaign, which encourages a balanced approach to interactive media use and families to come to an agreement on how their children spend their screen time.
"As times change and technology advances, the role of the parent stays the same in raising a safe, healthy, and successful child," said PTA CEO Warlene Gary. "PTA is proud to partner with Microsoft to provide parents with more resources that keep them involved in their children's lives. Using the PACT will help parents and children talk about and agree on interactive media use."
The family PACT is a comprehensive, proactive approach to setting rules on media use and asks parents and children to agree on the level of Parental involvement; the amount of Access children can have, including who they are allowed to play and interact with online; the types of Content children are allowed to play or watch, and the amount of Time children can use media. The family PACT is available for immediate download at http://www.xbox.com/isyourfamilyset..
Another all-new parental tool unveiled today is the Xbox 360 Family Timer, an addition to the console's existing set of industry-leading parental control features. Similar to its Windows Vista counterpart, the new Xbox 360 Family Timer can restrict children's activity time and can be set on a per-day or per-week basis. Helpful "notifications" will appear to warn the gamer that the session is nearing the end and the feature will automatically turn off the console when a pre-determined time limit has been exceeded. The Family Timer feature will be available for download via Xbox LIVE in early December.
Microsoft expects the news of the Family Timer to be received very favorably by parents based on independent* research it unveiled today that showed 62 percent of parents would welcome a tool to control the amount of time that children can use the video game consoles in their homes.
Bach, along with PTA CEO Warlene Gary and Super Bowl Champion and "Dancing with the Stars" finalist Jerry Rice talked to more than 400 students and parents gathered at Stuart-Hobson Middle School in Washington, D.C. today about the benefits of being a kid in the digital age and the challenges parents can face in navigating this complex new world.
The independent research sponsored by Microsoft released today asked parents a series of questions related to their children's use of digital media and represented feedback from 800 parents of children between the ages of five and 17 who have a video game console in their home. The research showed that 45 percent of parents say that enforcing rules about their children's media consumption creates tension at home. Nearly all families (99 percent) have some rules, but less than half (47 percent) have comprehensive rules concerning access, content and time. The research revealed that only 16 percent of families actually put media use rules in writing, and 40 percent involve children in related discussions.
Rice spoke to the middle school crowd about how important it is to have balance to be successful. "I'm a Super Bowl Champion and 'Dancing with the Stars' finalist, but my most important accomplishment in life is being a father," Rice said. "I try to teach my kids no matter what they do, they have to find a balance between work and fun. That's why it's so rewarding for me to join Microsoft and the PTA today to promote a healthy balance for our kids in this exciting digital age."
Microsoft's commitment to families is ongoing
Xbox was the first video game and entertainment system with built-in parental controls for both online and offline use. Known as Family Settings, these controls allow parents and caregivers to set guidelines for which games work for them, make informed choices about content, and decide who their children can play with online. Earlier this year, Windows Vista launched with a set of similar parental controls that allows parents to guide children's game playing, web browsing, and overall computer use. These controls help parents determine which games their children can play, which programs they can use, which websites they can visit-and when.
"We've seen a tremendous response to the robust parental controls offered on Xbox 360 and Windows Vista, and the Xbox 360 Family Timer will continue to deliver on our promise to provide safer, balanced and fun entertainment for everyone," said Bach. "Professionally, I am proud of my division's work in this area, and personally, as a parent of three school-age children, I know how important it is to be engaged in an ongoing dialogue with my family in order to uphold our household screen time rules."
According to Bach, with more than 13 million Xbox 360® consoles sold, the company's drive to empower parents is a core Microsoft responsibility. Last fall, the company launched the "Safety is no game. Is your family set?" national grassroots campaign (http://www.xbox.com/isyourfamilyset) with Boys & Girls Clubs of America and Best Buy Co. Inc. to educate parents about the tools and resources available to help them manage their children's interactive entertainment experiences on both Xbox 360 and Windows Vista. Year two of the campaign will continue with the support of these partners and others such as the PTA.





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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Boff @ Nov 7th 2007 10:38AM
My xbox email I had this morning was plugging the family side of it bigtime. Child-friendly pastel pink & pale blue controllers, XBOX 360 'Arcade' version, GHIII, Lego Star Wars. And a couple of others I've forgotten.
Boff @ Nov 7th 2007 10:42AM
And what good is the family timer if the parents are still letting the little fuckers play adult-rated games with other fully-grown adults???
Paul @ Nov 7th 2007 10:47AM
more info on the fall update!
TORO @ Nov 7th 2007 10:52AM
Wow long article, I skimmed through it but I got the point. I think it's a good initiative, Boff that's to the parents discretion. Atleast this allows the kids to get homework done, or just give them certain number of hours to play.
Now we'll just have to see how easy it is to change settings
DemonGSides @ Nov 7th 2007 10:52AM
@2:
It limits the amount of Murder Simulation they get.
Seriously, the only way I see this being good is if the kid has the console in his room, and he sneaks onto it at night, against his parents wishes.
Otherwise... Can't you just take the power cable?
thisguyrighthere @ Nov 7th 2007 10:53AM
The thing itself if another fine tool parents can use to regulate their childrens video game exposure but I share similar similar sentiments as @2 Boff.
It seems like nearly every "parent" of a kid with a console I run into doesn't even know they can block content of a certain rating with the password protection. Now they'll have a timer they can be ignorant about and/or just not bother to use.
When did parents stop being parents? It's not Rockstars or Manhunts fault your kids are violent, obnoxious or bad in school. It's your fault for not being parents.
poprocker @ Nov 7th 2007 11:00AM
good. now go do your homework!!!
big456 @ Nov 7th 2007 12:24PM
now i dont have to wake up with my xbox still on from watching movies late night and falling asleep
Jon @ Nov 7th 2007 11:05AM
all you have to do is A. Take Controller so they cant play or B. Take the batteries or any combination of a vital part of the console so they cant play without your permission.
TORO @ Nov 7th 2007 11:16AM
lol yea just do it the "old school" way like #5 and #8 suggested
jc @ Jan 15th 2008 11:28AM
I think this would be awsome except for the fact most parents are not going to be aware of this feature since most probably do not know enough about the xbox to implament this, nor will they be informed of said feature. But it would be nice not to have so many spazzed out little kids on XBL. I read a good thread on XBOX forums were someone suggested having a one XBL for 18 and over and one for minors. I would be willing to pay more for something like this, since I do not enjoy having a 6 year old yell racial slurs at me constantly during Halo3. AND NO THE FEED BACK SYSTEM DOES NOT WORK!!!
TURNERSVILLE @ Nov 7th 2007 11:49AM
I am a parent and I won't use this feature because I tell my son to turn the xbox off so he won't keep hurting my Halo rankings. It read on another site that Microsoft says the feature will be available in December. Looks like no fall update till then.
TORO @ Nov 7th 2007 11:51AM
TURNERSVILLE that's hilarious, you should just let your son play social matches lol
bentdog @ Nov 7th 2007 12:22PM
Its sad that this stupid feature is the big feature of the fall update. Its the only feature that anyone has heard of and fall is almost over!!
Bravo6 @ Nov 7th 2007 12:37PM
How about a family gold live option? That's what they really need.
Shadowcast @ Nov 7th 2007 12:54PM
So... I wonder if we'll see an increase in children punching their parents in the face around December too then.
mattydread @ Nov 7th 2007 2:18PM
Is there just a regular sleep timer for the 360? I hate thinking of the wasted electricity I'm paying for while my XBox runs all night if I fall asleep watching something on it. It seems like a feature it probably has, but I just can't find.
Scaught @ Nov 8th 2007 1:32PM
I remember my mom's old videogame time during my Sega Genesis days. She would march into my room, pull the plug and say "You're done".
Man, I guess I never thought about it, but my mom was a bitch.
Boff @ Nov 7th 2007 2:59PM
@16: I'm almost certain there's an auto-off setting in the system blade.
drgoon76 @ Nov 7th 2007 4:12PM
as a gamer and a parent I like the idea.
James @ Nov 7th 2007 5:01PM
@19: There is an auto-off, but your choices are "never" or "after 6 hours", which seems kind of stupid. I'd like to just be able to say "after 30 minutes sitting at the dashboard" and never otherwise...
As for the controls, great idea, BUT the lack of a "family" gold account kills it. I have to choose between using 1 account (so my kids can play online) *or* using the timer feature? Not good.
c4v3man @ Nov 7th 2007 5:07PM
I agree, I would prefer if there was an 18 and under XBL option THAT WAS CHEAPER. This cannot be part of a "family pack", as I'm sure there are many parents who would say "screw paying $80 a year for the family pack, I don't even use the dang thing, I'll just get the $50 adult one for the kid".
But I see this as being HIGHLY unlikely, as Microsoft would be expected to only allow E for Everyone games to be played through a minor's account, and all the children will complain about not being able to play Halo3 while annoying everyone else. So their parents will purchase an adult account, yet again, making the system useless. If they simply recorded the audio used during key xbox live games, and allowed for a '5 reports of abuse in a day and your account goes into suspension' rule, we could perhaps see something change online. 'If your account is suspended more than once legitimately during a 30 day period, then your account is terminated with no refund' would also help immensely. I'm sure parents wouldn't be happy paying the $50 annual fee more than once a year, and would likely stop after the second repurchase.
LV426 @ Nov 8th 2007 6:39PM
1) I cant help but laugh at this... just when Xbots try to call Nintendo kiddy, MS decides they want the title with something like this (which probably will only work on toddlers). Hysterical people.
2) Not going to work... but whatever.. Im still waiting for the promise of cross platform play (and making it with GOOD games, not Shadowrun... and GOOD OSs... not Vista)...