How long have you been in there?! A popular tourist destination in China has installed toilet timers. Reactions are mixed. - eviltoast

A video recently shared on various Chinese news and social media sites shows a set of timers installed above a row of toilet cubicles in a female washroom, with each stall getting its own digital counter.

When a stall is unoccupied, the pixelated LED screen displays the word “empty” in green. If in use, it shows the number of minutes and seconds the door has been locked. ‘We won’t kick people out midway’

The original video was reportedly taken by a visitor who sent it to the Xiaoxiang Morning Herald, a state-run local newspaper.

'We won’t kick people out midway’

The original video was reportedly taken by a visitor who sent it to the Xiaoxiang Morning Herald, a state-run local newspaper.

“I found it quite advanced technologically so you don’t have to queue outside or knock on a bathroom door,” the paper quoted the visitor as saying.

“But I also found it a little bit embarrassing. It felt like I was being monitored.”

  • @Glowstick@lemmy.world
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    6215 days ago

    I mean, what problem are they trying to solve? And is long-sitting people really the main cause of that problem?

    If a tourist destination is frequently winding up with people waiting for an open stall, and if the majority of people are in the stalls for what is considered a normal amount of time in their home country, then the actual problem is that the place simply doesn’t have enough stalls and needs to add more

    • @lurch@sh.itjust.works
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      3114 days ago

      if it shows hours someone likely died in there again. i think it’s okay to knock and check on them.

      • @Glowstick@lemmy.world
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        114 days ago

        That doesn’t sound likely to be the reason. That’s an extremely rare event that doesn’t need a regularized solution. And visible timers is pretty much the least useful way to address that problem, instead of using standard emergency pull cords or even just an alert sound that rings after X minutes.

    • @Jessica@discuss.tchncs.de
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      110 days ago

      My guess is it’s for the women’s restroom because when bathrooms are busy, most women just wait for a stall door to open and don’t always bend over to look under the doors to see if they’re even occupied. It’s also probably hard to see from a distance if the stall is occupied or not and nobody wants to be the one to shamefully walk back to the line because they had to get closer to check.

  • нердовіч
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    4015 days ago

    If your social credit score is high enough, you get 5 extra minutes on the Throne!

  • @aeronmelon@lemmy.world
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    3914 days ago

    If the Chinese are anything like the Japanese, some people (especially old people) will just lock themselves inside and sit down to take a nap. Even in a busy toilet, with no regard for people who actually need to use one.

    That feels like part of the reason this exists.

      • @lengau@midwest.social
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        3414 days ago

        I had a coworker at a previous job who used to take naps in the bathroom stall because it was the only place in the office with a bit of privacy.

        I kinda get it. I used to sit in a stall to decompress my brain because open plan offices are incredibly stressful to me. Every couple of hours I needed ~10 minutes of privacy.

      • HobbitFoot
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        514 days ago

        For some elderly, they may find that they need to nap again to function. If you don’t drive, you don’t have a private location to sleep beyond home or a hotel. Rather than go home, they sleep on a bathroom stall.

  • @Deadeyegai@lemmy.world
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    1714 days ago

    Having been to China, their public toliets are not up to Western standards in terms of smell and cleanliness. Either these are equivalent to Western-standard and they trying to curb abuse because they are attempting to be equitable, or they are trying to boost productivity via public shaming. I saw the locals would just squat and smoke while playing on phones while being very exposed without any care in the world. I was shocked at how widely accepted that was and that was in like a public kybo. Never seen anything like it.

    • @Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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      014 days ago

      Yes, in Shanghai proper, about 70% of the public toilets have toilet paper these days, and that ratio drops quickly to zero as you get into the exurbs. The newest bullshit are toilets which have paper, but you need a face scan to get it and it limits you to like 8 squares. It’s like Japanese high tech bathroom, but instead of some anime Moe toilet character, it’s abusive and dystopian. Almost as if it’s forcing compliant indignity into every corner of society.

  • @Kekzkrieger@feddit.de
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    1714 days ago

    I’ll make it a challenge to get the highscore and neither you nor the chinese government can do anything about that.

    I come I shit I conquer

    • @NaoPb
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      314 days ago

      So 99:59? Depending on how the value is stored.

    • @Xanis@lemmy.world
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      214 days ago

      I mean I ain’t stopping you. The Chinese guys though? They wouldn’t give a flying shit. Which is good because that’s what would be happening in the stall as they bust down the door.

  • @Breve@pawb.social
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    514 days ago

    Could have kept the empty/occupied sign with a subtle indicator for staff that comes on after an unusually long time. Same functionality without showing everyone the time down to the second.

  • @bradorsomething@ttrpg.network
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    314 days ago

    I recently installed a monitoring system for a Starbucks where a green light comes on near the register if the door has been locked 10 minutes. Before you get up in arms, they had someone die in there and just reopened the lobby.

  • @leaveWitX@lemmy.world
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    214 days ago

    In order to prevent employees from playing games in the toilet and being lazy, they do not go to work

  • FiveMacs
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    211 days ago

    A timer in the shitter. I’d flat out ignore it. Unless armed guards are kicking the door down, why should anyone care about it?