The fanny state

Every time someone claims that there are no communists left in China, or that the Chinese economy will surpass India’s in the long term, I point out the latest example of China micro-managing its most entrepreneurial sectors. (In contrast, India tends to overregulate old sectors and jumps into new ones, which government babus comprehend dimly, only when the moral police perceive political advantage.)

The Chinese government has now inserted itself into multiplayer game design. Gamers who spend more than three hours online will be stripped of points. Gamers who spend more than five hours online will be kicked off entirely:

The government in Beijing is reported to be introducing the controls to deter people from playing for longer than three consecutive hours… The new system will impose penalties on players who spend more than three hours playing a game by reducing the abilities of their characters. Gamers who spend more than five hours will have the abilities of their in-game character severely limited. Players will be forced to take a five-hour break before they can return to a game. [Link]

… there’s the [South Korean] couple whose infant expired as they played games in an Internet cafe; there is the [South Korean] death that occurred from exhaustion; and there are even murders that have resulted from feuds begun online… [Link]

Even the U.S. may succumb, though more to tax than to nag:

In the near future, the IRS could require game developers to keep records of all the transactions that take place in virtual economies and tax players on their gains before any game currency is converted into dollars. [Link]

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p>I actually see the wisdom in this. Maybe they can implement a one-hour cutoff on bad first dates, a two-hour cutoff on crappy TV, and a six-month term limit on despotic nanny regimes.

Personally I spend too much time in front of my PC. I look forward to the day when they send my ass a parking ticket. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, I’d have to park it on alternate sides of the apartment for seat-sweeping.

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11 thoughts on “The fanny state

  1. What about the mutiny addicts?

    Your vision will be blurred, your income will plunge, your sex life will disappear and your debating points will be made to sound incoherent.

    Nothing at all like what happens now.

  2. Your vision will be blurred, your income will plunge, your sex life will disappear and your debating points will be made to sound incoherent.

    The fact is that the New England Journal of Medicine has never published a study on the long term effects of blogging. We are treading untested territory here. Kind of like the Curies.

  3. On Tuesdays and Thursdays, IÂ’d have to park it on alternate sides of the apartment for seat-sweeping

    and all that walking around for 30 mins in between looking for a new place to sit…

    =)

  4. Your vision will be blurred, your income will plunge, your sex life will disappear and your debating points will be made to sound incoherent.

    And all this is more fun when you get someone else living with you addicted to the blogosphere as well. Two messed up blog addicts are better then one!

  5. Kind of like the Curies.

    You know, I’d much rather imitate the Curies’ mad passion than their young and painful deaths. I neither want to get run over by a carriage nor die of leukemia.

    I can’t find the link now, but there was a kid, in Korea, I think, who died after gaming for too long and not sleeping or eating. There clearly is an addictive component to it for some people. The Chinese plan is apparently motivated by the fact that game addiction sucks up the productivity of the brightest young minds. It provides all the endorphins for problem solving much constantly and easily. I have a theory that a lot of electronic activity is an opiate for the smartset, providing instant gratification endorphins where before only certain productive tasks could:

    blogging–taps into and sucks out on our ability to work for fame, our writing mojo, and our political activism music-mixing–taps into and sucks on our ability to actually go through the time and effort it takes for instrumentalism and live group music playing gaming–taps into and sucks on our ability to solve problems

    I’m no luddite, and I’m a big fan of all of these things, but I do think there’s a need for balance.

  6. Well, I guess Indian government is changing a lot these days. Even 20 years ago, very few people in India could think of opening up the Indian economy and now Indian government is going after international companies to come and invest and India. The governments of different states are even in rat rate to attract foreign investment in their states. Bringing outside invest has become an attractive for politicians in the local elections because of the fact that investment means jobs. So, I think that it is unfair to state that officials in Indian governments are not changing. yes, may be not like China but they are changing. For example, now the Indian government is actively seeing foreign investment in oil and gas exploration in India and it may bring $7 billion of investment very soon.

  7. Every time someone claims that there are no communists left in China… I point out the latest example of China micro-managing its most entrepreneurial sectors

    Obviously. Thats how communist govenments have operated everywhere. But the communist defend by saying that the scientific theory (viz. communism) has not been implemented to its fullest!

  8. China will surpass In India because they don’t have a class system

    I’m watching a Frontline episode on China, with context to the demonstrations and massacare of 1989 and todays ‘economic’ boom.

    The Chinese govt., that supposedly represents the ‘workers’ of China has abandoned them. In particular, the peasants and farmers that still constitute the bulk of the population. In an attempt to gain economic progress rapidly and artificially, the communist party of China has turned into the other side of the coin – the absolute capitalist.

    Workers in factories and industries do not have any rights to negotiate pay. In order to make cheap goods and undercut rest of the world, they have supressed the labor market and regulate it with an iron fist. They peg their currency against the dollar rather than letting it float on the market. So, their products (and profits) are competitively priced in the market, yet labor is held static by abusive measures. Migrant workers pour in from rural areas, work like dogs, and move on to the next project. This reminds me of America during the turn of the 19-20 century. Only difference is that people eventually forced change as avenues existed for people to voice their concerns and opinions (labor laws and the rise of unions). No such space exists in China. And it is dangerous for China.

    India will level off with China some day, because China cannot sustain its current internal economic model, and India has greater opportunties to grow. Labor unions protect Indian labor interests (obviously with strong support from communists), but those interests are being balanced out by free market business and their policies. Balanced growth in an open environment where people can negotiate deals may be slower, but it is far more stable and sustatinable. The ability to barter your services for equitable pay is key. Now, you can get into situations where neither side can see the writing on the wall (general motors and its labor unions, or in India’s case state employees of inefficient govt. companies), however, when shit hits the fan, all will know both contributed to their own downfall. Nobody else to blame but themselves.