California Passes Violent Games Bill 341
TecnaDigit writes "Today, after sitting on the bill for nearly a month and constant political pressure, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed Assembly Bill 1179, the bill that would prohibit the sale and rentals of violent video games to minors. Again, the Entertainment Software Ratings Board and the Video Software Dealers Association (VSDA) are challenging the bill. According the the VSDA, the bill is faulty in that a game is decided whether or not it is 'violent' by juries, and different juries could have different opinions on what is defined as 'violent'." Commentary on GamerGod.
Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:5, Insightful)
what mess are we in? are we still assuming that violent video games lead to violent behaviour in real-life? we've been over this argument a dozen times.
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:5, Funny)
The game is also racist. ALL Goombas are evil, ALL koopas are evil, and ALL of bowsers children are automatically evil. What happened to judging people on the content of their character?
Is this the kind of game you would want your 12 year old playing? Are we going to let some punk kid deal this to our children from orders handed down from an evil corporation called "EBGames", it's true intentions hidden behind a veil of technical legality?
Gentlemen, I propose a witch hunt.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:5, Funny)
At least he's on the right side in the War on Drugs....
Not true. He also eats the "magic mushrooms" which give him "special powers". Druggie...
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:2)
They want to put the consequences of their bad choices* on the rest of us, and that's quite a mess, don't you think?
* I'm not saying making life is a bad choice, rather that if one wants to pursue a career, having children is not a good choice b
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:5, Interesting)
Unless he repents all his movies -- which were mostly aimed at the same kids this bill is designed to "protect" -- isn't there a mental disconnect?
I saw "Collateral Damage" -- and it was "sorta fun". But this violence filled fantasy has nothing practical about solving societies ills, other than the timeless virtue of killing a few innocent bystanders as long as you "get the bad guy".
Anyway, I'll agree with everyone saying "parents"
If people really want to reduce violence, then they'd be better off improving kids diets in the schools. Perhaps giving courses on conflict resolution. And, paradoxically, martial arts or fight training. People who feel threatened, angry, or weak will get more violent. I don't see how a video game would change this other than in the most empty life.
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:4, Insightful)
By undermining the concept that the parents are responsible for their children and what comes into their homes.
When merchants will sell anything to anybody, yes, they do. The government can't do anything about parents who give sips of wine to their kids at dinner but it can certainly prevent merchants from selling merlot to a nine year old. This law lets parents do what the parents want with their kid and seeks to ensure that the decision remains with them.
Um... maybe the kid has a job? A paper route? Mows lawns and shovels snow and is paid in cash? Perhaps the kid tutors other kids on the side? Maybe sells hacking services to a foreign government? You were kidding when you suggested that the only source of money for a 15 year old is his parents, right?
What was the equivalent of GTA:SA that your parents needed to worry about being brought into the home?
This bill has everything to do with parental control... please reconsider: a law that says that shopkeepers aren't allowed to sell things to minors that their parents don't want them to have certainly doesn't do much for anybody else...
Subjectivity by any other name... (Score:3, Interesting)
You probably shouldn't assume this man is over 30. If he's my age, his parents might have been worrying about Vice city, or GTA3, or Quake 2, or Doom (came out over 10 years ago).
The whole problem with the recent witch hunt of video games is that they have been as violent as they are now for quite some time. Lawmakers are just now starting a war against video games to get parental approval while they are
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:3, Interesting)
Heck, I hope in twenty years, we still have kids healthy enough to get in fights -- instead of overweight, asthmatic wimps.
If there is any big issue, it would be with gang violence. Often these kids come from single parent or two over-worked parent homes where their is little parental involvement. I was just talking to a police officer who deals mainly with gang violence. But, we can't just change these parents by making lofty moral comments or more severe criminal p
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:2)
Psycology is a science now?
The tests I've seen have shown that heart rate and testosterone levels increase right after seeing violent images. People at these elevated rates of excitement are more likely to respond violently.
The effect reduces quickly, however, and it's inconclusive if the overall level of violent behavior increases or decreases.
Little kids will start hitting you -- quite often, after seeing fighting in a cartoon. If you can explain
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:3, Insightful)
Note that this is a very different thing from making them *want* to kill.
Nobody has presented anything to refute this.
Did his statement offer anything more than opinion ? If not, there's nothing to refute.
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:5, Interesting)
Which is precisely the point. Too many parents don't care. Most of them do, but there is a minority that's way too anarchic with their children. I don't have much of a problem with organized anarchy, but it doesn't really work for raising children.
The real solution would be to find the parents that don't..well..parent, turn the kids over to child protecive services and then a loving adoptive family, and castrate the parents. (Hopefully if you catch the parents while the child is young enough, it won't be too traumatic.) And then monitor the child in case the bad parenting is genetic.
The very existence of the need for a government agency of child protection is proof that there are parents who don't parent.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:5, Insightful)
That's what the law is for...sadly. (Score:2)
States' Rights (Score:2)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:2, Insightful)
Parents would still be able to buy these for their children if they wanted.
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:2)
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:2)
That's what this bill does. It let's the parents decide. If they want their kids playing these games, they can buy them. It doesn't keep consenting adults from enjoying any of these things so what's the problem?
Re:Ackkk I hate freaking subjectivity (Score:3, Insightful)
1. let the parents decide whether they teach their children fairy tales or quantum mechanics
2. let the parents decide whether their kids can have sex with them
3. let the parents decide whether their kids can take drugs or not
4. let the parents decide whether their kids can drink alcohol
It's not the state which wants to take away parent's rights. It's the parents who shy from their obligation to raise the kids. Everybody thinks that their kids
Why, oh why.... (Score:5, Insightful)
No matter how much law is enacted, they still won't be able to enforce the law with anything that approaches what people envision. Grandmothers and family members will still buy games and movies for kids when they shouldn't....
What a gigantic waste of time and money... pfft!
Re:Why, oh why.... (Score:2)
Re:Why, oh why.... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why, oh why.... (Score:2, Interesting)
It seems to me that this law will be very ineffective.
Re:Why, oh why.... (Score:2)
Couldn't Jonnie just take the buss to Nevada and buy the game there?
And concluded:
It seems to me that this law will be very ineffective.
My question is: how?
Whather the law is effective or not, your logic is lacking. Sounds more like a knee-jerk reaction opposing the general idea of government trying to protect kids from certain vices. There are, of course, ways to avoid enforcement, but it still may raise the bar, which may lead to a general reduction of usage of the games by minors.
I'm opp
Define irony (Score:5, Insightful)
Rob
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
Re:Define irony (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Define irony (Score:3, Insightful)
It doesn't really look like he was too eager to sign it. Give the guy a break.
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
Rob
He doesn't deserve a break. (Score:3, Insightful)
If he did not want to sign this bill, then he should have not signed it, regardless of how much political pressure he was under. Freedom of expression for the Californian citizenry is far more important than him having to tolerate pressure from a few anti-violence extremists for a little while.
Re:He doesn't deserve a break. (Score:2, Informative)
Wrong. The system of government where one man decides what the law should be, based on his own personal likes and dislikes, is called "tyranny". In the system called "democracy", the law is decided based on what the people want, and the government - as servants of the people - are required to implement and enforce the laws the people want, regardless of their own personal beliefs
Re:Define irony (Score:3, Interesting)
Collateral Damage: rated R
The 6th Day: rated PG-13
End of Days: rated R
Eraser: rated R
True Lies: rated R
Last Action Hero: PG-13
Terminator 2: rated R
Total Recall: rated R
Red Heat: rated R
Running Man: rated R
Predator: rated R
Raw Deal: rated R
Commando: rated R
Red Sonja: PG-13
Terminator: rated R
Conan the Destroyer: PG (this movie was practically a live-action cartoon, btw.)
Conan the Barbarian: rated R
So, there you have it, his history of action movies, spanning over 23 years. He's got one PG
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
Rob
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
With video games it is.
Why is that? I was able to watch R-rated stuff at 14 regardless of what my mother said, and my kids will be able to play 'adult' video games regardless of what I want. How is this a problem? The only thing I've seen so far is parents who can't be bothered to raise their kids.
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
It's not the watching or playing by minors, it's the selling to minors.
Wait, is it illegal to sell Terminator to a 17 year old?
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
Re:Define irony (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Define irony (Score:2)
Won't someone think of the children? (Score:4, Insightful)
Welcome to the jury system! (Score:5, Funny)
That a jury might rule one way one time, and another way the next?
These guys need to start submitting Slashdot stories. They're experts at old news.
Re:Welcome to the jury system! (Score:2)
juries on trial (Score:5, Insightful)
Indeed. Although we routinely use juries to decide matters of actual life or death, using them to judge video-game violence is beyond their competence...
Re:juries on trial (Score:3, Informative)
In a murder, there is a body. Everyone knows that a crime has been commited, it is just a matter if the person accused of the crime is guilty.
With this, you are going to have a whole bunch of busybody housewives making subtle decisions on the content of games... something that most people who can't or don't want to get out of jury duty are not mentaly capable of doing.
Re:juries on trial (Score:3, Informative)
Re:juries on trial (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:juries on trial (Score:2, Insightful)
I just have to say... (Score:2, Funny)
Violent Games... sigh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Violent Games... sigh (Score:2)
The "violent games don't make violent people" thing has been over a hundred times, but then fire doesn't make pyros.. they just get influenced by it. I think a study needs to be done where deranged kids are given books, movies and games and see which "screws them up the most".
I've played violent games, read violent books and watched 18+ f
Last time I checked, (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.esrb.org/
Re:Last time I checked, (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Last time I checked, (Score:2)
Ignorant laws... (Score:3, Insightful)
Um? Hello? You mean like the ratings system they have now? The one that is more granular that the MPAA system? With movies I get a general "R" rating. WIth games I get a breakdown of what that "M" is for, similar to the TV ratings system.
So do the people who come up with this stuff simply not realize that there has been a game content rating system in place for YEARS now? If not, that's just woefully ignorant.
Ratings=good (Score:2, Insightful)
Parents don't want to watch every movie beforehand to see if it is suitable for their child, same goes for games. Rating is perfectly acceptable way to do it.
For that matter, why don't people challenge movie ratings? The juries that rate movies are generally quite
Re:Ratings=good (Score:3, Interesting)
I think not [wikipedia.org]
Re:Ratings=good (Score:3, Informative)
On a practical level, I don't really care about this legislation, beacause, on a pract
Re:Ratings=good (Score:2)
What about sexuality? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What about sexuality? (Score:2)
Like every one else ... (Score:5, Informative)
The problem is, that there is already judicial precedence on the issue.
The above is from http://fact.trib.com/1st.01.02supr.html [trib.com]Also check here http://www.constitutioncenter.org/education/ForEdu cators/DiscussionStarters/BanningViolentVideoGames .shtml [constitutioncenter.org]
and here http://culturalpolicy.uchicago.edu/conf2001/papers /walsh.html [uchicago.edu]
So this is nothing new people. Ever since the ID brought us a world where we could literally kill and watch Nazi's die (even before that really). This has been an ongoing debate.
The one thing you MUST realize is that this is not a bill being pushed by the Right-Wing Conservative Nut Jobs (granted they aren't really all against it), this is being pushed by DEMOCRATS. You want to know who hates freedom of speech? Hillary Clinton, after the Columbine murders ordered the surgeon general to find a link between school shooting tragedies and Quake. He found no conclusive link, but that didn't stop her, Lieberman, and the rest of the gang from going hog wild trying to censor video games. I lean left politically, but you can bet your ass I don't agree with censorship.
Do what I did, I joined the EFF http://www.eff.org/ [eff.org] and joined the ACLU http://www.aclu.org/ [aclu.org]
Re:Like every one else ... (Score:2, Informative)
Righto. It's simple to just take aim at Schwarzenegger [scatteredsheep.com], the dude is an easy target. The bill wouldn't have been signed, of course, had it not been for the passage by the legislature who put the thing on the Gubernator's desk. Instead of turning our rage or annoyance or whatnot against that fool, we would be better
Great post! ..... (Score:2)
Re:Great post! ..... (Score:2)
It took all of five seconds on their site to find the ACLU Annual Report. [aclu.org]
If you're a typical middle class white suburban man and you get wronged by your local police because they choose to be lazy and not do their job investigating a crime committed against you, writing to the ACLU will get you nowhere.
Please cite references.
Is it just me or... (Score:2)
Their objection is based on WHAT? (Score:2)
So apparently they object to it because it works the same way as our judicial system, which has been in place for hundreds of years. Does the phrase, "I have a cunning plan" spring to mind?
Re:Their objection is based on WHAT? (Score:2)
This a problem with the way law and the courts work in general. The definitions they use are defined
Revolt! (Score:2)
How about an FPS game where the hero (a videogamer) starts an armed revolt against the California government?
Rate it at M or AO, sell it to minors, challenge the law when you're arrested.
Hmm...
Hmmm.... I'll have to alter my game design a bit.. (Score:5, Funny)
Let's see, yeah - the main character will now be carrying around an arsenal of flower-based projectile seeders. Upon hitting the target, these "horticulture tools" will instantly spread a rather red blotchy flower, possibly dripping petals. People will be so enamored by these lovely blooms that they will instantly transcend their ugly everyday lives, given enough flowers, and fall to the ground in pure bliss - possibly with a soul-shattering scream of freedom.
Some people will be driving around in horticulture-tanks, which do massive seeding. Upon sufficient counter-seeding, these tanks will celebrate the wonder of the event by launching short-range non-violent fireworks, breaking down once they are satisfied that their flowery job has been complete.
The flowers will be everywhere - breaking down walls, flooding innocent cities, carried by massive armies of rabid horticultualist monsters. Apparantly, many people in the game world will be flower-phobic until properly administered to with a variety of area-affect flower spreaders.
Thanks, California, for providing the perspective we need to make games imaginative, once again!
Ryan Fenton
Arnold Schwarzenegger ??? (Score:2)
Now I shall view him to be just a simple political coward.
The perverse part (Score:3, Insightful)
I know numerous parents that buy their kids any video game they ask for, regardless if it shows sex, violence, etc. Better to do that than suffer the wrath of a pissed off pre-teen.
The abdication of parental responsibility in the last twenty years is astounding. But I'm part of the generation that spoils its kids but fortunately have no little curtain climbers.
If I did have kids they'd sure as hell play by my rules though.
That's really who it's for (Score:2)
The price of complacency (Score:3, Insightful)
I abhor overreaching government intrusion into these kinds of things, but the video game industry has had ample time to step up to the plate on this. This has been an issue for over five years at this point. The film and tobacco industries self-regulate to some degree in this regard. There's no reason video game companies couldn't have done the socially responsible thing and headed this kind of thing off. It still may not be too late, but when money-grubbing video game companies and their corporate parents carry on like they don't give a shit, then I find myself extremely unsympathic to reactions against this kind of legislation.
Re:The price of complacency (Score:3)
but the video game industry has had ample time to step up to the plate on this.
What in the hell are you talking about? The video game industry has had fine grained rating systems in place for years. Or didn't you notice that ESRB sticker on every damn game in the store? The problem is parents that can't say no to their little horrors.
Whiskey. Tango. Foxtrot. (Score:5, Informative)
It's called the Entertainment Software Ratings Board, ESRB, you can find them at www.esrb.org. They are a non-profit ratings group started by the games industry to rate games. Developers submit games for ratings, the ESRB rates them based on known criteria, and then returns a rating. You may then place that rating and ONLY that rating on your game.
It's those little stylized black and white logos. They have a letter, tilted to the left in them. They are located on the lower left or lower right of the front of the game box and are clearly visible. On the back, there's a clarification of why the game got that rating. So, go to a retailer some time, and look at the games. See how many you find that don't have an ESRB rating. My bet? You'll find none. Nearly all games are submitted for ratings (all large publishers submit all their games) and most retailers will not carry unrated games (even retailers that carry unrated movies).
They already have a very effective regulation system in place, that is just like the one the movie industry has. The logos and ratings are trademarked so you cannot use them without the permission of the ESRB, and they only grant permission for the rating your game actually recieved (same way the MPAA does it for movies).
So get off your high horse. The game industry has done a great job of regulating itself. If you can't control your kids and won't take the time to play the games first and see fi they are acceptable, that's not their problem. There are plenty of adult gamers out there and we don't want you telling us what we may and may not play.
This law seems to serve no purpose other than to let bad parents lash out at retailers and distributors when they fail as parents and their kid does something wrong. HAte to break it to you but if your kid does a drive by, GTA did not make him do it, he had much deeper problems.
Re:The price of complacency (Score:2)
What exactly is the issue? Why is it an issue?
This is exactly the kind of made-up problem that politicians waste their time on to try to gain a reputation for "doing something". It's a lot easier to pass a stupid law like this than to solve important problems.
It's worked so well for alcohol and tobacco too... (Score:4, Interesting)
The Bill's definition of Violence (Score:3, Informative)
(A) "Cruel" means that the player intends to virtually inflict a high degree of pain by torture or serious physical abuse of the victim in addition to killing the victim.
(B) "Depraved" means that the player relishes the virtual killing or shows indifference to the suffering of the victim, as evidenced by torture or serious physical abuse of the victim.
(C) "Heinous" means shockingly atrocious. For the killing depicted in a video game to be heinous, it must involve additional acts of torture or serious physical abuse of the victim as set apart from other killings.
(D) "Serious physical abuse" means a significant or considerable amount of injury or damage to the victim's body which involves a substantial risk of death, unconsciousness, extreme physical pain, substantial disfigurement, or substantial impairment of the function of a bodily member, organ, or mental faculty. Serious physical abuse, unlike torture, does not require that the victim be conscious of the abuse at the time it is inflicted. However, the player must specifically intend the abuse apart from the killing.
(E) "Torture" includes mental as well as physical abuse of the victim. In either case, the virtual victim must be conscious of the abuse at the time it is inflicted; and the player must specifically intend to virtually inflict severe mental or physical pain or suffering upon the victim, apart from killing the victim.
(3) Pertinent factors in determining whether a killing depicted in a video game is especially heinous, cruel, or depraved include infliction of gratuitous violence upon the victim beyond that necessary to commit the killing, needless mutilation of the victim's body, and helplessness of the victim.
Interesting that mental torture is included in the definition; so much for Medal of Honor: Abu Ghraib. There does seem to be a theme that simply blowing away your enemies isn't enough -- you have to relish it, go out of your way to cause extra pain to the digital victim -- "gratuitous violence upon the victim beyond that necessary to commit the killing."
OK, let's look at Arnold's movies (Score:2)
There goes mario (Score:2)
I think Mario shows a lot of indifference to the suffering of bowser when he drops him into the fiery pit of lava below. I mean, he doesn't even look back at the victim and feel bad before looking for the princess.
I think a fiery lava death should count as serious physical abuse. I'm going to look behind my back from now
Blame the nannies in the legislature for this (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Blame the nannies in the legislature for this (Score:3, Informative)
Banning GMail [zdnet.com]
Feng Shui [about.com]
When will it end. (Score:2, Funny)
Imagine reading that in the paper.
symtom not a cause (Score:2)
Well now we know the true cause of violence in America: Video games. What utter nonsense. America is a country that was founded on terrorism and violence. Violence in video games is just a reflection of culture not the cause of it.
According to Yee: scientific evidence linked the playing of the games by impressionable teenagers and preteenagers to acts of violence or hostile attitudes toward girls and women.
Most of this comes from bogus studies which basica
Out of Sync? (Score:2)
I've never understood this kind of thinking, and often wonder what rules like these are really supposed to accomplish. What do the law makers expect these laws to achieve? Do they honestly think that ass
Re:Out of Sync? (Score:2)
This seems competely out of sync with the movie rating system. Granted, IANAL, but it looks to me like a 17 year old is allowed to go see the latest violence packed "Terminator 15" feature film, but then isn't allowed to subsequently go across the Mall and buy the video game that was released with the movie.
I've never understood this kind of thinking, and often wonder wha
Strawman arguments against parents (Score:5, Insightful)
Precisely! But some of you are clearly not experienced enough to know what the hell you're even talking about or how complicated that proposition gets.
I am a parent. I don't want society raising my children. In that regard, I don't want society shoving overtly violent or sexual imagery into my childrens' faces at every turn. I want to raise my child... not society and not corporate entertainment industries (that includes video game companies.) I want to make decisions about what imagery and content is appropriate for my child. I don't need advertisers, movies and video game companies deciding what's appropriate to put out there for my children.
So, when you say you don't think "society should raise your child," I agree.
And if you think video game companies are all about over-the-counter game sales, then you're fooling yourself. Look around. Violent video game imagery is gradually saturating our society and I don't care to be pummelled with that at every turn. Even now, I have to keep my kids away from the video games in most movie theater lobbies because some of them are ridiculously violent--more violent than some of the crap on the movies playing there. I have to carefully watch what games are demoed at Toys-R-Us. I have to keep a close eye on what my kid sees on the covers of the game boxes.
It's not all just parents monitoring what their kids are buying and playing. I wish that's all it was. That's the easy part. That's not what inspires this kind of legislation. If you think that's all this is about, then get outside more often. And stop griping at this strawman argument about inattentive parents you've propped up. That's not even the half of it.
Let's hope the recall effort goes through (Score:2)
News today says that someone is starting a recall effort to get Schwartzenegger out of office [reuters.com]. I still can't believe they voted "the groper" into office. California is supposed to be so liberal and progressive, yet they put him in power.
Re:Funny (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're not a slave, why should you care about slavery? Dangerous logic my friend.
Re:Funny (Score:2)
So, are you suggesting that the minors should have a say in the matter?
Sounds reasonable. Of course, they're still living at home, so the parents have final say over whether a given game stays in the house.
Re:I am happy to see that this bill has been passe (Score:2)
Re:wow, this is stupid (Score:2)