Banned Games Find Ways To Bypass Authority 58
Stony Stevenson writes "PC World reports that digital downloads and online distribution is making the regulation of banned computer games impossible. Running with Scissors has employed a new sales channel that allows its controversial Postal games to be downloaded direct to consumers' PCs. This has created a grey area between content regulators and classification enforcers that allows end users to receive banned content unchecked. From the article: 'The Australian Communications and Media Authority hotline manager of content assessment, Mike Barnard conceded that preventing distribution was not conclusive and the only foolproof method of stopping people downloading banned content was if they chose not to.'"
In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Insightful)
education is the key (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:education is the key (Score:2)
Newsflash: Everyone wants the rest of the world to act/think like they do. People in government have the power to (try and) force it to be so.
Re:education is the key (Score:2)
Re:education is the key (Score:1)
Re:education is the key (Score:2)
Try again.
Google "grammar try and" for more.
Re:education is the key (Score:2)
She said it best (Score:5, Funny)
So basically... (Score:2)
That said, I think the issue of "banning" games in the first place should be addressed directly for the absurdity that it is.
Re:So basically... (Score:1)
Not true... (Score:2)
Re:Not true... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not true... (Score:1)
No, but they can make it illegal to posess, sell, import or produce them. It's just a question of extending the "obscenity" laws. I'm not saying it's right (I think it's very, very wrong) but it's how it will happen in at least some countries I think.
Re:Not true... (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, information is way easier to smuggle and hide than illicit substances. Especially in the age of the Internet. Expect any attemps to ban games to be as effective as the "War on Drugs".
Re:Not true... (Score:2)
Re:Not true... (Score:2)
Face it, everytime you do something to stop someone from making one drug, they start making another, more dangerous drug to replace it.
If you could buy coke and heroin at Walgreens, about 98% of all the bad things that happen because of drugs would go away.
Re:Not true... (Score:2)
So because you can buy alcohol legally, the bad stuff isn't happening?
No alcholism in society, no drunken wife beating takes place, and no drunken fighting right?
You can't necessarily assume that legalization is the solution...
Truth is, we should just open it up to consumption. Who are we to dicatate what a person should or should not consume? We are all victims of our bad choices, one
Re:Not true... (Score:4, Funny)
Maybe next time I buy a gram of coke it should contain a little warning label "Don't do games!" as the older arcade games used to have in attract mode. :)
Re:Not true... (Score:1)
Why do you suppose that is? (Score:2)
Perhaps they should look at why people want to use drugs and deal with those problems. Alcohol, which I'd say is
choice (Score:4, Insightful)
Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:4, Insightful)
Or perhaps if people knew the difference between fantasy and reality, fewer people would go see movies and watch television and begin to wake from their unrealistic dreams?
Re:Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:2)
See my reply to the other comment. I address most of these issues. I never say the government knows what's right or wrong. What I do say is that well adjusted adults can tell the difference between right and wrong, and furthermore, that well adjusted adults can tell the difference between fantasy and reality. The problem is, some children and a number of adults cannot tell the difference between fantasy and reality. This is not the fault of violent video games.
Re:Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:2)
Because the currently appointed government officials are exactly the people to be defining right and wrong. Good idea. Oh, wait, no. That's what parents are for.
Re:Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:2)
I agree that parents should be allowed to control what video games their children play. If you look at my post, nowhere do I say that the government should ban video games or restrict
Re:Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:3, Insightful)
What the government should not do is attempt to define FOR ME what is right and wrong, I should decide that for myself and my children (and when they ar
Re:Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:2)
Re:Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:2)
Re:Right and Wrong, Fantasy and Reality (Score:2)
Every decade has it's stupid bogeyman that is "training children to be murderers". Whether it's novels, movies, alchohol, pinball, communists, television, comic books, dungeons and dragons, satanists, heavy metal & rap, or video games.
People never clue into the fact it's the same old crap they
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:2)
Banning smoking in public places is the same idea. It's not for the protection of the customers, who have a choice, but the protection of the workers, who may not. Just how dangerous second hand smoking is makes anot
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:2)
Where I come from, they have a law requiring all businesses to declare themselves as being smoke free, a smoking business, or having a smoking section. Smoking sections had to be sealed from the rest of the building and have their own ventilation.
Local law required that signs be placed on the doors of all businesses (basic signs available free from the city). Employers have to list in their advertised job openings and on their job applications if they are a smoking busin
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:1, Funny)
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:2)
See the thing is, in just about every city where smoking is banned from bars, lots of bars close down. Since the local bar is (or rather, used to be) the only place left where smokers could go and indulge in their filthy addiction, a lot of bars have come to depend on smokers for the vast majority of their business.
Instead of banning smoking entirely, the correct way to handle it would have
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:1)
I've seen reports [cdc.gov] that say there is no significant impact [no-smoking.org]; please cite your source for this claim. Thanks. (Hate secondhand smoke; love bar. Usually try to sit by the door of my favorite tavern [leadbetterstavern.com] when fresh air dillutes the cigarette fumes.)
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:2)
Pfft!
My sources are the neighborhood bars that were doing great pre-ban, out of business post-ban. I don't care what "no-smoking.org" has to say on the matter. I can look at the vacant buildings.
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:1)
Post hoc ergo prompter hoc. If there has been a rash of closings in your area, that might have more to do with local economics or demographics, liquor law changes, a general decline in alcohol consumption [potsdam.edu], or a hundred other factors, than a smoking ban. Or it might just be a statistical anomaly.
Let's put some numbers to this. How many bars in your town pre-ban? How many now? How long ago did this ban go into
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:2)
Bloomington Park Tavern was one of the busiest bars in the entire southern metro area of the Twin Cities. The place is huge, and it was packed pretty much every night.
Until the smoking ban. It was a very nice place to go after that, because not only was the air fresher, but it was a hell of a lot less crowded. They went out of business.
I wish I could say this was the only example.
Again, I'm not a smoker, and I hate being in smoke-fi
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:1)
Re:And before online distrubution there was: PIRAC (Score:2)
Smokers tend to die young and fast. Non-smokers tend to live long lives, and eventually die of things which gradually wear them down while they lie in hospital beds for months and even years.
Smokers SAVE health systems money. Death by lung cancer or heart attack is way cheaper than slowly failing kidneys.
Banning Encourages Creativity (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Banning Encourages Creativity (Score:2)
Let's ban civilian space flight. Every hippy and anarchist in the country would rush to get into orbit.
As a side bonus, we'll have actually managed to get rid of all the hippies and anarchists.
Didn't Australia ban online gambling (Score:2, Insightful)
Or, even better - stop nannying their citizens.
Umm... (Score:1)
What am I missing here? + BONUS OFLC RANT (Score:1)
That last sentence confuses me. Their 'restrictions' act purely as a 'guideline'. THEY DISALLOW THE GAME TO BE SOLD IN AUSTRALIA, and as the previous sentence says, there are penalities for owning the games they've
BONUS OFLC RANT (Score:2)
The OFLC has their head up their [censored] in more ways than this. They have attempted to apply their ruling of outright banning sexual violence as it is applied to film to video games, without the capacity to fully test the content. The wording on their guidelines for film content is that *any reasonable adult* should be able to view whatever they wish. However their definition of a *reasonable adult* appears to be a methodist eunuch with no urges of any kind.
nothing new here... (Score:1)