Posts Tagged ‘MCST’

International e-Sports Federation for the disabled is established

April 30th, 2012

After IeSMOD(International e-Sports Meets of the Disabled) 2011 World Championship, participants from all over the world felt sympathy for the needs of the vision for e-Sports for the disabled and discussed about the establishment of International federation.

During the event, participating nations such as Korea, USA, China, Germany, Poland, Indonesia etc signed on the establishment of International e-Sports Federation for the disabled and becoming a member. The total of 12 countries joined to the federation.

The federation received the permission for establishment from MCST(Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism) on the 28th of March, 2012 and finished its registration on 19th of April.

The federation will develop a business for promoting e-Sports for the disabled.

Share on TwitterSubmit to redditDigg ThisShare on Tumblr

Game Culture Advisory Group Established

February 28th, 2012

Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism(MCST) has established Game Culture Advisory Group(GCAG) yesterday.

The GCAG, comprised of parents, civil organization, counsellors, teachers, and so on, is to have a monthly meeting to advise on governmental policies and report game addiction and its reality to the MCST.

Moreover it would play a role of council services for healthy game culture by proposing problems and improvements based on actual user experience of online/console games and analyzing causes of game addiction.

“Games have become a life culture which not only teenagers but also broader ages are enjoying today. Therefore I believe our homework is to make game culture healthy. I hope the GCAG contribute to the healthy game culture  through pointing out pros and cons of the games by playing them personally,” said YoungJin Kwak the vice minister of the MCST.

Share on TwitterSubmit to redditDigg ThisShare on Tumblr

Law to Ban Students from Beta Tests

February 8th, 2012

BoHwan Park Assembly member and other 10 people of the Ministry of Education, Science, and Technology(MEST) have submitted a special bill about prevention and treatment of internet game addiction in minors on February 6.

The bill would wield a powerful regulation to game industry as it would ban minors from playing any beta testing games, also including the Cooling-off system and the post-censorship.

What is more serious about the bill is that it could set the scope of the target to not only PC online games but also console games, smartphone games, or all other online games because it just specified ‘real-time internet games.’ The Cooling-off system also encompasses all the games.

So young students would lose an opportunity to participate his/her anticipating game even though it is rated Everyone if the bill passes the National Assembly.

Any game developers/publishers that do not enforce the Cooling-off system or allows minors play unreleased games would be sentenced to up to three years’ imprisonment or be fined up to about US$27,000.

Since the submitted bill is a special bill that is superior to the Game Law of the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism(MCST) and the Youth Protection Law of the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family(MGEF), its power is much stronger than the two Shutdown systems.

“To solve the game addiction of the young we are trying to establish the special law that limits daily playing time and supports consultation and treatment centers for the game addiction, and this would help them grow into healthy human beings,” said Park.

Share on TwitterSubmit to redditDigg ThisShare on Tumblr

MCST “470,000 Minors Are Presumably Addicted to Games”

February 2nd, 2012

The Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism(MCST) is about to periodically investigate the reality of game addiction among minors.

YoungJin Kwak the vice-minister of the MCST announced today it will investigate all kinds of game policies and provide tailored post-measures for prevention and solution for the game addiction.

The government assumes that about 470,000 minors(6.5% of total 7.24 million elementary, middle, and high school students) are addicted to the games today.

It is, therefore, planning to start inspecting the policies enforced to prevent the game addiction this August, also establishing mandatory systems that require consent of parents and self-confirmation when the minors sign up the games and notice their parents and themselves the history of their game play.

The MCST’s action is likely to pertain to recent regulations made by other ministries. It stresses that just making bunch of regulations would not solve the problem, but only prevention and treatment would do.

“We are well aware of the growing concern about the side-effect of the game addiction. But it is somewhat sad that some people are just blaming the phenomenon without having a discussion. The game industry also needs to burden social responsibility of the side-effect since it has grown up into a certain size,” said Kwak. ”The game is one of many cultural lifes played by the minors and the adults alike. We also should not neglect its industrial contribution which has achieved more than half of content exportation and huge employment.”

Share on TwitterSubmit to redditDigg ThisShare on Tumblr

MEST Tries to Precensor Games Privately

February 1st, 2012

The Ministry of Education,, Science, and Technology(MEST) seems to found an organization called ‘Healthy Game Review Committee(HGRC)’ which would be in charge of precensorship over games as a means to root out school bully.

The HGRC, which would be comprised of a group of non-gaming industry officials including school teachers and parents, seems to be in charge of reviewing Everyone, Teen(12+), and Mature(15+) games in order to once again classify them according to violence, nudity, etc. Yet whether its result would restrict the actual game release is not known. Full details on the committee will be introduced on February 6.

The ministry’s such action, however, collides with the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism(MCST)’s will to transfer the deliberation to a private organization which is scheduled to be launched this July. If they push forward with it, an unprecedented double rating would come true following the triple regulation.

“The MEST is messing up the effort of the MCST’s transfer of the game rating system to the private. I have no idea why the government is so obsessed with suppressing the game industry with the double censorship and the triple regulation in such situation that most of precensorship over the cultural content have gradually been removed today,” said an unnamed industry official. “There is a rumor that the MEST is also plotting a measure to set up a fund from the game industry. If the regulation and the precensorship from the MEST are for the future fund, they are definitely unacceptable.”

Share on TwitterSubmit to redditDigg ThisShare on Tumblr