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Microsoft, the PTA, and Jerry Rice launch the Xbox 360 Family Timer photo

New parental controls for the Xbox 360 have been launched under the  "Safety is no game. Is your family set?" campaign, which uses the combined forces of Microsoft, the Parent Teacher Association, and famed football Super Bowl champion Jerry Rice. Wow, what a tag team!

They've launced a new tool called the Xbox 360 Family Timer. This feature (coming in early December) lets mom and pop restrict children's activity time and can be set on a per-day or per-week basis. Microsoft was smart enough to include a nice "game time is almost over" message, letting young gamers wrap their session up. The system will automatically power down after the alloted time has expired. 

"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 the Entertainment & Devices Division at Microsoft.

The group has also kicked off an initiative called PACT, which is "a family contract intended to foster family discussion about screen time guidelines." 

Hit the jump for the full release. 

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 parental 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 about 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 on the Xbox 360 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 the Entertainment & 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 National 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 the predetermined 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 children spend using 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 may face in navigating this complex new world.

The independent research sponsored by Microsoft released today asked parents a series of questions about their children's use of digital media and represented feedback from 800 parents of children between the ages of 5 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 of parents 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 a 'Dancing with the Stars' finalist, but my most important accomplishment in life is being a father," Rice said. "I try to teach my kids that no matter what they do, they have to find a balance between work and fun. That's why it's so rewarding 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 with whom their children can play online. Earlier this year, Windows Vista launched with a similar set of 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 Web sites 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," Bach said. "Professionally, I am proud of my division's work in this area, and personally, as a parent of three school-aged 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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Dale North is Destructoid's Editor-In-Chief, a founding editor, and specialist in Japanese gaming. An accomplished musician, Dale was reporting from Japan during the earthquakes of 2011. Luckily, he got the fuck out alive and is home in America now with his wife and beloved corgi, Einstein. Dale is also a co-founder of Destructoid's sister anime site Japanator. Likes Corgis, Sega Saturn, PSP, iPhone, Photographic tools. Meet the rest of the team



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31 comments | showing # 1 to 31
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Aerox's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 10:51
Aerox
Despite the warning, I imagine this is going to end in many a child screaming "MOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMMMM I DIDN'T GET TO SAVE MY GAME!" followed by a full blown tantrum and throwing of controllers.

(At least it will if kids today are anything like I was when I was 8 and had a Final Fantasy game going)
Dale North's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 10:52
Dale North
mom I'M NOT TO A SAVE POINT YET -

think about the endless cycle - there's a save point 3 hours away, and every day your system shuts off at 2 hrs.
NintendoFreek's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 10:57
NintendoFreek
I think this is the reason that kid punched his mom in the face over Halo 3.
Aerox's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 10:57
Aerox
This is going to be far more trouble to parents than it's worth. How about actually helping your child to like things outside of video games and doing shit with them instead of relying on a system to automatically shut the game off so you can limit your involvement as much as possible?
LimeGuardian's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:00
LimeGuardian
Can you just turn the console back on? What if mommy and daddy need their Halo time?
MoeFoe71's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:04
MoeFoe71
Useless feature. We already have 3 red lights.
Snoopbob2006's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:04
Snoopbob2006
well if me and my friends werent playin ps1 we were knockin on peoples doors then runnin away, whipin dog shit on the inner part of car doors and basically bein little bastards...

Its all gonna happen again when the kids xbox's shut down and they all meet up to cause havoc!!!!!
NintendoFreek's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:05
NintendoFreek
Damn, right.
Upgrayedd's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:09
Upgrayedd
It's nice to see features like this.

I can't remember, do consoles have a "v-chip" like lockout system on ratings (similar to the PS2 having one for DVDs)?

Seriously, if they could implement that then promote it, I think you would help the industry as far as PR on violent (or sexual) content in games goes.
KyleGamgee's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:09
KyleGamgee
We'll never hear about instances where this gets used properly. We'll only hear the horror stories.

Still, I am in favor. (but it's not going to help if the kid has Cable TV, DVD and a PC with DSL in their room.)

Parents can be idiots. Just look at my brother-in-law Paul. What a dumbass.
MechaMonkey's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:15
MechaMonkey
So who is telling the parents about this?
Ridunkulas's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:18
Ridunkulas
Oh god,
@Aerox
The kids are now going to bitch beacause their Xbox is shutting off.
Silverback 55's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:21
Silverback 55
If Jerry Rice endorses this, then it is a great idea.
foxhound009's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:35
foxhound009
hehe lol... poor kids.. when I was young......... it's a long story but the point is.. no restrictions for me :P
monosylabik's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:39
monosylabik
jerry rice???really??
thats one out of left field.ummm i guess this is a good idea.
microsoft should do a better job at selling this new update
if they really want it to work. sure he's jerry rice but, he's only jerry rice. women wont know who the scary black man on the internet talking about their kids is.
B-Radicate's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:40
B-Radicate
Now how are the youth of this great country supposed to become ignorant bigots if parents don't let them stay up into the wee hours of the night making people's heads explode and yelling profanities? Geez, Microsoft, get your head out of your ass... for the betterment of society.
oroku_saki's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:44
oroku_saki
So, this will probably have the following effects:

A. Kids are going to control the console settings before their parents even get to them.
B. They will just play on a system without built-in restrictions.
C. Hissy fits over not reaching save points.

Other than PR padding for gaming companies, the parental controls on gaming consoles are pretty much useless. If you want your kids to have a reasonable amount of discipline, you're just going to have to take an active role in parenting.
BS3 Owner's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:45
BS3 Owner
Microsoft Take on this issue :
Mekanikles's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 11:47
Mekanikles
Parents today suck, just pull the damn plug. But then of course, you might actually need to spend some time with you kid... *puts back plug*
Knivy's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 12:32
Knivy
Kids will just go back to TV watching.
PsychoSoldier's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 12:43
PsychoSoldier
Shouldn't parents watch and moniter time anyway without a little timer to tell there kids when to get off. If the get play video games, they'll just watch tv or log onto the internets, never ending cycle.
JamesSorensen's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 12:48
JamesSorensen
this has always been a 360 feature; just now they are adding a timer to RROD...

Sorry, perfect setup :)

but ya parents won't even know about the feature let alone how to enable it...
Jetsetlemming's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 13:00
Jetsetlemming
This has WHAT to do with safety, again?
Also, if you can't monitor your kid's gaming and tell him when it's time to go do homework or go to bed on your own without an automated system handling it for you, there's something very fucking wrong.
Virtualgirl's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 13:47
Virtualgirl
While it might cause some anger over not getting to a save point in time, I think it is a good idea. Anything that gives parents additional control takes away some of the unnecessary blame the industry as a whole gets. With features like this, less people can bitch about how videogames are destroying their childs lives because they have the ability to control playtime.
KyleGamgee's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 13:56
KyleGamgee
That's true, VG. It puts the responsibility -or at least the tools to be responsible- in the hands of the parents, where (shocker) it belongs.

Also, my wife will probably use this to make sure I get the damned dishes done.
Orionsaint's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 14:20
Orionsaint
Jack Thompson must be happy. All those millions of kids now won't shoot up the world now.
mrkonchu's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 14:36
mrkonchu
Well at least the time is system based and hopefully on internal memory settings so it cant be bypassed. This definatly is a great thing for parents.
mispelt's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 14:43
mispelt
I remember my NES having this feature. Only, it was my dad who would come in and go "You're done" while flipping the machine off no matter where I was or what I was doing.
mrkonchu's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 14:50
mrkonchu
It would also be nice if this had a curfew type setting, time limits are nice but sometimes its more when and not how long that matters. So for instance weekdays only allowing play from time A to time B.
Holyetheline's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 16:14
Holyetheline
Oh that's nice, sucks to have parents these days...
Bob Muir's Avatar - Comment posted on 11/07/2007 17:29
Bob Muir
This is also useful for college students who are playing too many games.
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