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| Rules for portable devices such as unmounted or loose mobile phones, tablets, laptops, media players and game-consoles 
 When driving (except when parked), you must not:
 
 Touch a portable device, even if it is turned off
 Allow a portable device to be in your lap or on any part of your body or clothes (unless it is in a pocket, or in a pouch attached to your belt or other part of your body)
 Look at the display of a device being operated by another person in the vehicle
 Pass a portable device to a passenger
 If a passenger, pass a portable device to a driver
 You can:
 
 Connect to your vehicle’s Bluetooth and place the device out of sight and reach before you start driving.
 Use a mobile phone or other device to pay at a drive-through.
 Rules for mounted devices (mobile phones and tablets) and inbuilt navigation and entertainment systems
 
 For mobile phones and tablets, the mounting must be commercially designed and manufactured for that purpose, and the device must be secured in the mounting.
 
 As a general rule, drivers can use their mounted or inbuilt systems for functions such as music and navigation, provided they are not entering text, scrolling or viewing images or video. However, drivers can use voice controls for music and navigation.
 
 When driving (except when parked), you must not:
 
 Enter information, text, numbers or symbols
 Scroll on the device (such as scrolling through texts messages, social media, music etc.)
 Use the device for:
 Reading or writing text messages, emails, message threads or viewing websites
 Watching movies, TV, video games or other moving images
 Viewing social media and photos
 Video calls.
 If a passenger, you must not use the device if it is likely to distract the driver.
 You can however, touch the device briefly to:
 
 initiate, accept or reject an audio call
 play or stream audio material
 adjust volume levels
 use a function on the device designed to assist you to operate the vehicle
 use a navigation function
 use a function on the device designed to monitor a driver’s behaviour or condition, or
 carry out a professional driving task
 Rules for wearable devices such as smart watches, smart glasses and wearable heads-up displays
 
 When driving (except when parked) you must not:
 
 touch the device (other than by incidental contact caused by wearing the device)
 use the device, for example, for any of the following:
 Reading or writing text such as messages and emails
 Viewing social media and photos
 Engaging in video calls
 Using a navigation function on the device
 use a function on the device designed to monitor a driver’s behaviour or condition
 carry out a professional driving task.
 However, you can do the following but only if using voice controls:
 
 initiate, accept or reject an audio call on the device
 play or stream audio material on the device
 adjust volume levels.
 
 https://www.vicroads.vic.gov.au/safety-and-road-rules/new-vic-road-rules-2023/full-licence-drivers%E2%80%AF
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