Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Heads up! Seoul launches campaign to keep smartphone users safe

-

Pedestrians glued to their smartphones were given something else to look at this week, as officials in Seoul launched a safety campaign to keep them from walking into busy traffic.

Smartphone-related collisions between pedestrians and vehicles in South Korea have more than doubled in five years to around 1,000 reported incidents in 2014, according to the Transportation Safety Authority.

The problem is especially acute in a country where smartphone penetration currently stands at around 80 percent of the population, most of whom seem intent on mastering the art of walking and texting.

In a bid to reduce the number of people either stepping carelessly into oncoming traffic or slamming into each other on the sidewalk, officials in Seoul -- one of the world's most wired cities -- have begun installing the first batch of 300 warning signs this week in five locations across the capital.

"We picked locations with the highest number of young pedestrians since the majority of smartphone users are in their teens to their 30s," Kim Ooc-Kyeong, a Seoul city official in charge of the project, told AFP on Wednesday.

Some signs are attached to traffic light poles and depict a person looking at his smartphone as he is about to be hit by a car.

But given that the target audience are people who wouldn't look up from their screens to see such warnings, other signs have been plastered on the actual sidewalk.

"We put 250 signs on the pavements because they will actually be seen by the pedestrians that are looking down at their smartphones," Kim said.

Officials in Seoul  the most wired city in the world  have launched a pilot campaign hoping fresh wa...
Officials in Seoul, the most wired city in the world, have launched a pilot campaign hoping fresh warning signs will help keep pedestrians off their smartphones on the streets
Ed Jones, AFP

But neither type of warning seemed to have registered with locals interviewed at lunchtime by AFP.

"I'm always on my smartphone, and I've never seen the signs before," said Kim Hyun-Chul, 29. "They need to make them stand out more."

Koo Sung-Hoi, 27, was also unaware of the efforts to keep him from a smartphone-related injury.

"I think the signs on the pavements are too small to be noticed," Koo said.

South Korean smartphone users spend an average of four hours a day tweeting, chatting or playing games, with about 15 percent showing symptoms of addiction, according to state data.

Seoul plans to monitor the effectiveness of the signs until the end of the year before deciding whether to expand the project.

Similar campaigns have already been trialed in Europe.

South Korean smartphone users spend an average of four hours a day tweeting  chatting or playing gam...
South Korean smartphone users spend an average of four hours a day tweeting, chatting or playing games, with about 15 percent showing symptoms of addiction, according to state data
Ed Jones, AFP

Antwerp has introduced designated walking lanes in a handful of busy shopping streets so smartphone users can look at their mobiles without bumping into other pedestrians.

The German city of Augsburg even installed traffic lights in the pavement at tram crossings for smartphone gazers.

A 2014 simulation found that if 1,500 people looking at their phones tried to cross Tokyo's notoriously crowded Shibuya intersection, only about a third would make across without bumping into others, falling or dropping their mobiles.

Pedestrians glued to their smartphones were given something else to look at this week, as officials in Seoul launched a safety campaign to keep them from walking into busy traffic.

Smartphone-related collisions between pedestrians and vehicles in South Korea have more than doubled in five years to around 1,000 reported incidents in 2014, according to the Transportation Safety Authority.

The problem is especially acute in a country where smartphone penetration currently stands at around 80 percent of the population, most of whom seem intent on mastering the art of walking and texting.

In a bid to reduce the number of people either stepping carelessly into oncoming traffic or slamming into each other on the sidewalk, officials in Seoul — one of the world’s most wired cities — have begun installing the first batch of 300 warning signs this week in five locations across the capital.

“We picked locations with the highest number of young pedestrians since the majority of smartphone users are in their teens to their 30s,” Kim Ooc-Kyeong, a Seoul city official in charge of the project, told AFP on Wednesday.

Some signs are attached to traffic light poles and depict a person looking at his smartphone as he is about to be hit by a car.

But given that the target audience are people who wouldn’t look up from their screens to see such warnings, other signs have been plastered on the actual sidewalk.

“We put 250 signs on the pavements because they will actually be seen by the pedestrians that are looking down at their smartphones,” Kim said.

Officials in Seoul  the most wired city in the world  have launched a pilot campaign hoping fresh wa...

Officials in Seoul, the most wired city in the world, have launched a pilot campaign hoping fresh warning signs will help keep pedestrians off their smartphones on the streets
Ed Jones, AFP

But neither type of warning seemed to have registered with locals interviewed at lunchtime by AFP.

“I’m always on my smartphone, and I’ve never seen the signs before,” said Kim Hyun-Chul, 29. “They need to make them stand out more.”

Koo Sung-Hoi, 27, was also unaware of the efforts to keep him from a smartphone-related injury.

“I think the signs on the pavements are too small to be noticed,” Koo said.

South Korean smartphone users spend an average of four hours a day tweeting, chatting or playing games, with about 15 percent showing symptoms of addiction, according to state data.

Seoul plans to monitor the effectiveness of the signs until the end of the year before deciding whether to expand the project.

Similar campaigns have already been trialed in Europe.

South Korean smartphone users spend an average of four hours a day tweeting  chatting or playing gam...

South Korean smartphone users spend an average of four hours a day tweeting, chatting or playing games, with about 15 percent showing symptoms of addiction, according to state data
Ed Jones, AFP

Antwerp has introduced designated walking lanes in a handful of busy shopping streets so smartphone users can look at their mobiles without bumping into other pedestrians.

The German city of Augsburg even installed traffic lights in the pavement at tram crossings for smartphone gazers.

A 2014 simulation found that if 1,500 people looking at their phones tried to cross Tokyo’s notoriously crowded Shibuya intersection, only about a third would make across without bumping into others, falling or dropping their mobiles.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Business

Catherine Berthet (L) and Naoise Ryan (R) join relatives of people killed in the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 Boeing 737 MAX crash at a...

Tech & Science

Microsoft and Google drubbed quarterly earnings expectations.

Business

There is no statutory immunity. There never was any immunity. Move on.

Tech & Science

The groundbreaking initiative aims to provide job training and confidence to people with autism.