Graffiti Game Banned in Australia 313
afaik_ianal writes "The Sydney Morning Herald is reporting that 'Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure' has been banned in Australia. The game involves battling the authorities to overthrow corrupt officials using only street fighting skills and graffiti. From the article, "The decision was endorsed last night by the Federal Attorney-General, Philip Ruddock, who had asked the board to review of the game's MA15+ classification after local councils and state governments voiced concerns that the game would promote graffiti.""
More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't it ironic though that the point of the game is to fight government corruption and promote freedom of expression.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it's standard practice in political censorship to attack some side issue and not the political message. For instance, Ulysses was written by an Irishman and criticised British rule over Ireland.
Ulysses was banned for obscenity rather than for it's political content even though the so called obscene content was tame even for the time in which it was written. The same case can be made for the film of A Clockwork Orange, which I believe is still banned in the UK.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:4, Informative)
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2, Insightful)
Come on! A Clockwork Orange is one of my favorite movies. I've read the book twice as well, but to say it's tame is an absolute lie, unless you consider rape, murder, graphic violence and gratuitous drug use to be kid stuff. Just because Hollywood etc. has desensitized you to the point that you consider these things tame, does not mean that they actually are.
Even when viewed through a contemporary lens, the portrayal of the banality of extrem
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:3, Informative)
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
All I'm trying to say is that it's not the government's responsibility to control what you do in your own home. That should be left to parents, period!
If a game is violent, promotes gun use, promotes crime, grafitti, prostitution, gangs, etc..., etc...
SO F'ING WHAT!
If you don't want your kids to be affected by those types of in
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, America is a perfect example.
The more they regulate and litigate the worse things get here.
There is a correlation, wether the totalitarians want to admit it or not.
Politicians have absolutely NO RIGHT nor should they have the power to tell the population what is right or moral for what sould be completely obvious reasons to anyone smarter than the average barnyard monkey.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
They might pro-create.
Better they should be writing on walls and shooting each other.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:5, Insightful)
Mr. Thompson? Jack? Is that you?
You can have your cute games with their colored walls. I think what the "realistic" games do is allow an outlet for things that should not be let out in public. Like killing people, or walking around randomly pissing on folks. It's safer to do it in-game, and you also avoid running into petty quarrels with those law enforcement people.
I support the idea that the parents are ultimately responsible for what input their kids recieve in the fragile little minds of theirs. There will always be people doing bad things because - well, they do bad things. The reasons are many and complicated, but games (as TV before them) are not the one and only cause of this. A catalyst, perhaps, not the reason.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:5, Insightful)
Guns and porn are freely allowed, just not to a kid. You need a licence for a gun - you can even carry them arround in the street if you have a permit. Porn is allowed to everyone who's legally old enough.
I also had this discussion with a friend a while ago about if drugs should be legalized, like alcohol is - i think that marijuana should be legalized, but he made a pretty good case about how every single drug should be legalized, which is a longer story in itself. Even then, alcohol, tobbaco and some medicaments ARE drugs and you can get them, again, if you're old enough.
Eventually it's up to the parents to decide what's sutiable for their children to see. See, kids are NOT the only one playing games. And we have a rating system already to determine which games can and which ones can't be sold to a kid. Banning it was completely unnecesary. The game doesn't encourage vandalism more than GTA encourages stealing cars, Hollywood action movies encourage shooting people and religious TV shows encourage catholicism.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
Carrying a gun in public (Score:3, Informative)
People, this is VERY country and state specific.
For example, in my state of ND, the ultra-short list:
1. Open carry of unloaded firearms is legal, except for prohibited areas. No permit needed. Once you're out of the city/large town or on a firing range it can be loaded.
2. Possession of firearms: The only firearms that you need a 'license' for is fully automatic ones. They must be federally legal, which m
Re:Carrying a gun in public (Score:2, Interesting)
Open carry is prohibited in many municipalities, but AFAIK Denver is the only county that prohibits it. (That said, all of Denver county is incorporated, so it depends on how you look at it.) The municipality I grew up in did not have such a prohibition in the mid '80s. There was some old-timer that carried openly in the mall!
A concealed carry permit does not confer any additional right to openly carry. You will probab
Re:Carrying a gun in public (Score:2)
Re:Carrying a gun in public (Score:2)
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
Really?? It's been a little while since I was down in Oz, but as I understood it you are only allowed a limited range of firearms and handguns in particular (I thought) were prohibited so no question of carrying them in the street, permit or no... I mostly hung around in Sydney so maybe it's different in y
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
Which brings up a very important point: we need some comprehensive and reliable market research that shows the demographics of game players. A lot of the push for game censorship seems to be in the name of the precious children ... and we need to be able to show that the "games are for children" adage is wrong.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:5, Interesting)
So, do you think this [chathamhillgames.com] game should be banned? It encourages kids to take the roles of 19th century slaves illegally running away and depriving their masters of their lawfully-owned property!
And what about this [wikipedia.org] game, where players are encouraged to steal a continent from its indigenous people, and then to commit high treason against their monarch? Clearly it should be banned! Won't somebody think of the children?!
Sorry, but breaking the law is not always wrong. I would far rather our children were being taught to think for themselves and to actually consider the moral implications of various acts, than that they were being brainwashed into a black-and-white "Obey the laws because the State Knows Best" worldview.
If there is hope, it lies with the proles. Let's educate them.
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
How is it alright to limit the freedoms of everybody to make up for idiots who aren't willing to make the effort and take responsability?
Re:More Stupid Censorship and Irony (Score:2)
And in perception, how like a God! (Score:3, Insightful)
that sucks (Score:5, Funny)
Re:that sucks (Score:2)
I guess kids will have to stick to the real thing.
I only wish graffiti writing and street fighting would work to remove the current crop of corrupt government officials. Alas, it's not that simple.
They have now guaranteed it will be a hit! (Score:5, Insightful)
And I would love to read their position paper (which will apparently get relaeased) soon that explains the majority and minority positions. I cannot understand how they feel that they should ban this game and yet allow violent movies to not be banned.
Re:They have now guaranteed it will be a hit! (Score:2)
"Normal" adult voters watch violent movies. Only (non-voting) "kids" play computer games.
Who else feels... (Score:5, Insightful)
Grafitti vs beating people up... (Score:5, Insightful)
That makes me very sad. We teach our kids that violence is cool, acceptable, exciting, fun.
Then we complain about all the violence in the streets.
If you want to ban a game, please ban it for excessive violence, not for some paint sprayed on walls.
Re:Grafitti vs beating people up... (Score:3)
What is being done in Australia is blatent censorship. The government needs to realize it's up to the parents to raise their children right. There is no substitute for a parent teaching a child right from wrong.
Chicago curb job? (Score:2)
Strange laws (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Strange laws (Score:2)
I don't think there is that much of a difference between 16 and 18. Kids who are going to be influenced by a game to go out and spray paint stuff would have to be much younger than 16.
Re:Strange laws (Score:2)
Umm... Okay? So I fail to see the problem (or rather, I fail to see why your government doesn't just implement the trivially obvious solution to the problem)... Allow adult-only ratings to apply to games.
AU already has higher ratings for movies, or so I've inferred from other comments on this topic. Just extend them to apply to games, and you have no problem. No more need to outright ban games.
Re:umm (Score:3, Informative)
Philip Ruddock (Score:5, Interesting)
I've got an idea for a character in the next version of the game.
But seriously, most of the games out there promote violence, road rage, all kinds of stuff, and they can still be sold. What makes graffiti so important?
You Fuckstick! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:You Fuckstick! (Score:2, Funny)
We need to be carefull. His media manager's assistants are going to have to print out 50 pages of /. on friday morning. Phil is not going to be a happy chap after spending friday reading at -1.
Better carry my passport around for a while, just in case.
LoL (Score:2)
I've been having this night^H^H^H^H^Hday-mare for some time that I was driving down the road and Phil and Johnny were crossing in front of me but so far apart that I could only choose one.
Now I just need to find somewhere to show the contrasting pics of graffiti and authorised murals I took at the weekend.
Maybe a carrot for the kids in terms of something interesting to do might achieve a lot more than forever telling them what not to do.
It used to be Music (Score:5, Insightful)
I love the following Frank Zappa quotation.
"There are more love songs than anything else. If songs could make you do
something we'd all love one another."
-- Frank Zappa
Not exactly the same, but close enough if we replace love songs with first person shooters and....
Nevermind
Re:It used to be Music (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It used to be Music (Score:2, Interesting)
"I wrote a song about dental floss but did anyone's teeth get cleaner?" --Frank Zappa
Before music ... (Score:2)
... it was comics "[1] [wikipedia.org] [2] [cbldf.org].
Seems like there will always be a "scary bogeyman" "corrupting our children".
A bit of context, please. (Score:5, Informative)
Since the game involves just as much violence against policemen as GTA does, and the only non-violent aspect to the game is the vandalism, my only surprise is that they considered it possible for an MA15+ in the first place.
Not the issue at all (Score:3, Informative)
This game was not banned because it featured graffiti in a fashion similar to how GTA features violence. It was because it (apparantly) contains material that is instructional rather than a shallow representation like the violence in GTA (or graffiti in Jet Set Radio Future). It wasn't considered to "promote" illegal behaviour simply because it repres
bullshit (Score:2)
Re:yes, we do (Score:3, Informative)
From the FIRST PARAGRAPH of the link you so helpfully supplied:
"R 18+ and X 18+ are not classifications for computer games."
Forget RTFA -- this is more RYOFL.
Re:A bit of context, please. (Score:2)
Jet Set Radio (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Jet Set Radio (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Jet Set Radio (Score:2)
Don't you think... (Score:2)
Re:Don't you think... (Score:2)
Wow (Score:3, Interesting)
So it's ok to "promote" shooting people, running people down and using / abusing prostitutes (GTA and plenty of others) but it's not ok to "promote" tagging a wall. Hmmmm we have a very weird society.
Re:Wow (Score:5, Insightful)
GTA was banned in Australia too [zdnet.com.au]
Hmmmm we have a very weird society.
I'm not sure whether you're talking about the USA or Australia - you seem a little confused. (but yes, they're both quite weird)
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Either US or Oz or anywhere else for that matter (I'm from the UK) I meant society globally or certainly at least the westernized bits of it seem to have some strange values. It doesn't surprise me that GTA was banned in Australia but I'll bet there are a lot of similar games that aren't. I'm against censorship in general but I think it's about time we had some official sanctioned game ratings with more teeth. When the graphics were poor it was fair enough to have no ratings or industry imposed rates but mo
Re:Wow (Score:2)
I think it's about time we had some official sanctioned game ratings with more teeth. When the graphics were poor it was fair enough to have no ratings or industry imposed rates but modern games are getting to the point where some of the content is quite disturbing.
Um, did you not realise that we do have official sanctioned game ratings in the UK? Violent games are rated by the BBFC, the same statutory body who rate films, and their ratings are enforced by law - it is illegal for a shop a
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Ok, that passed me by. I thought it was still a volantry rating system in the UK.
shouldn't somebody resign ? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:shouldn't somebody resign ? (Score:2)
The Attorney-General mentioned in the article has been involved in deporting and detaining sick Australian citizens and he still has his job.
Riiight ..... (Score:3, Insightful)
All things considered, this is a fantastic marketing stunt.
My proposed solution, by the way, is to ban all sales of video games to {but not possession by} minors. That way, parents and guardians get to decide what is and isn't appropriate.
Re:Riiight ..... (Score:2)
And yes people DO buy games. Thankfully, otherwise nobody would be making them anymore. Thats called econ
Re:Riiight ..... (Score:2)
Just seems like senseless paranoia to me. (Score:3, Interesting)
Game banning in Australia (Score:5, Informative)
After this, the game was edited to remove the prostitute functionality and re-released, conforming to Aus standards. The reason the prostitutes were removed was NOT because of the sexual content, rather, it was because of the very strict rules we have here about sex and violence. It was the fact you could kill hookers after sex that had the game censored.
Vice city was pre-edited by the developers and had NO sex (the Candy Suxx FMV's were fucked up) Pardon the pun.
GTA:SA came out WITH hookers, unedited. I have no idea how/why this happened.
Generally games are censored here when sex and violence is mixed, IN ANY WAY. Duke Nukem 3D was censored because you could shoot the strippers.
I dont understand the logic of this banning though
Re:Game banning in Australia (Score:2)
How do they know the content is there? They don't play them (obviously).
Perhaps the games are built with a "censor" interface. Or perhaps the censors rely on the documentation.
Its a vicious circle (Score:2, Funny)
(I don't know any lyrics for spray painting).
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Stupid logic (Score:2)
Where in Japan do you live? Go hang out in the big cities in Kinki, like Kobe or Kyoto, or Osaka. There's plenty of graffiti. It's not as wide spread as in say London or American cities, but its there (and some of it is quite good).
Don't Panic (Score:3, Funny)
1. Increased popularity of the game
2. Lower profits to the manufacturer
3. Larger US/AU bandwidth usage for a few weeks.
That's about it really.
Gee... (Score:3, Insightful)
Gee, for a minute I thought they had concerns the game would promite violence, but *pfew*, violence is still normal, and accepted.
The writing is not on the wall (Score:3, Funny)
Expected this... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Expected this... (Score:2)
Ruddock may well be remembered that way - I certainly think so after the big "donation" by someone who wanted residency who then by "sheer coincidence" got it. The reputation of the Australian government is set to go spiralling anticlockwise down the toilet soon after the details of bribes in Iraq by what was at the time a wholly government owned body get some international attention. It's not nice to know we ripped off a UN fund allocated to stop
Re: (Score:2)
Rinky Dink Goverment = $$$ (Score:2)
Intervening Politicians (Score:2, Interesting)
Meanwhile (Score:2)
Heard about the game on NPR (Score:2)
I doubt this is really about graffiti (Score:2)
The basic fact that all the would-be-do-gooders-for-everyones-own-good is that games do not encourage people to get up off their ass, let alone do something other than go to work and go to Mc D's and get home to play some games. Its a good public pacifier and should be included with the likes of retirement, minimum wages, and beer in any governments arsenal.
I have to get some kidnappings accomplished in COV, I got no ti
hahaha (Score:3, Funny)
Re:GREAT! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:GREAT! (Score:5, Insightful)
Quoth the Simpsons:
Meyers: I did a little research and I discovered a startling thing...
There was violence in the past, long before cartoons were invented.
Kent: I see. Fascinating.
Meyers: Yeah, and know something, Kent? The Crusades, for instance.
Tremendous violence, many people killed, the darned thing went
on for thirty years.
Kent: And this was before cartoons were invented?
Meyers: That's right, Kent.
Re:GREAT! (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not saying the game should be banned. Freedom of speech and all that. But I am saying that games like Getting Up and Tony Hawk's Underground 2 should be rated closer to the adult end of the scale by the ESRB and that retailers should take this rating into account when selling games directly to minors. I'm also saying that developers should think about the impact that their work has on society and make an informed decision about whether they're handling things responsibly, rather than just thinking, "Man, this is sweet!" and charging forward.
Re:GREAT! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:GREAT! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:GREAT! (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/10/23/10345 61498638.html [theage.com.au]
http://www.abc.net.au/stateline/qld/content/2005/s 1504831.htm [abc.net.au]
Re:GREAT! (Score:2)
Re:GREAT! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:GREAT! (Score:2)
Re:...and so they should !! (Score:2)
Re:...and so they should !! (Score:5, Informative)
And it was done better than this dreck will be.
Re:...and so they should !! (Score:2, Funny)
Lets say they should also forbid all the games where private or public property is damaged in any way. In addition to every game where lifelike things are damaged in any way. phew. Breakout... Are these public walls you are destroying brick for brick?
Re:...and so they should !! (Score:3, Informative)
To graffiti you had to do simple chains on the joystick and to finish a level you'd have to graffiti over another gangs or all the propaganda by the cops/secret organisations etc. It was fun and didn't encourage me to go spray paint walls, just gave me a lot of cool songs to hum to myself and a newart style to play with.
It's a game that hasn't aged a d
Re:Not surprising - the games are coming up! (Score:5, Interesting)
It would be a much better use of time if they could stop the trains on the Frankston line smelling like stale piss.
Re:Not surprising - the games are coming up! (Score:2)
I wonder if anybody figured out what MAX+GJE was all about?
Re:Not surprising - the games are coming up! (Score:2, Interesting)
I actually like the fact that they spend time cleaning the walls that are covered in graffiti. I take the train every day and it gives me some fresh graffiti to look at. And clears of the ugly black tags.
Although Conne
Re:Not surprising - the games are coming up! (Score:3, Funny)
The fresh piss has been on back-order for ages.
Re:A cure for grafitti (Score:2)
I think a better punishment would be to have to spend a few days with the teams that have to go around the city to clean up the graffiti, and have to p
Oz is ruled by people "doing the Blokey-thing' (Score:2)
the australian gov't is notorious for not giving people what they want,
as the case of 'morning after pill" ru486 [usedto induce abortions.] shows:
we've just seen passage of a bill that might - in a year or so, make ru486 available here; it hasn't been all these years!
way behind the times