Videogame Decency Act in Congress 73
GamePolitics reports on yet another attempt by lawmakers to make the world safe from the dangers of electronic entertainment. Entered by Representative Fred Upton, the bill spells out penalties for game companies that try to 'sneak' something past ESRB raters. Says Upton, "I guess I thought the FTC would have had some more teeth than they apparently have... I'm not at all happy... In essence there are no consequences. None... I would like to have thought that (Take-Two and Rockstar) would have been able to be fined for millions of dollars for the trash they put out across this country. I am going to be looking to write legislation giving the FTC the authority to impose civil penalties."
censorship fixes everything (Score:5, Insightful)
What does that even mean? Hot Coffee wasn't a 'sneak', it was excised content that required a third-party modification to even view. Yeah it was on the disc, but it wasn't accessible. It's not like you hit a secret code and OMG PORN.
Re:censorship fixes everything (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:censorship fixes everything (Score:5, Funny)
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Heres what I think Congress should do.
They should make it illegal to sell or produce things which can be modified in any way so as to display pornography.
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We've seen this before. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Ratings do NOT create censorship -- they just inform the consumer. It is sort of like complaining that food labels "censor" high-calorie fatty foods and create an underground market for twinkies.
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Only problem here is that the video game business has gone all (RI|MP)
Financing (Score:1)
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Just look at what happens to NC-17 films and how hard dir
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It's the first step to censorship, though. First, the government not-so-gently pushes for "voluntary" ratings and labeling (see MPAA ratings and the PMRC [wikipedia.org]-induced content warnings for music). Next step is to enforce penalties for selling/showing content of certain ratings, like when Utah tried to introduce legisl
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But, hey - maybe that's a good thing. Maybe we'll come out the other side into a video game "Bronze Age"/"Modern Age", where new creative talent can revolutionize the way America looks at games.
Maybe.
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The best example of how badly the CCA gutted the comics industry is to consider how America had a vibrant and thriving comics industry that was larger than Japan's before the CCA came around. Shortly afterward it was reduced to a sad husk of its former glory while the Japanese Manga industry flourished and produced works that are to this day considered classics of literature.
That's right... (Score:3, Insightful)
Didn't someone buy GTA:SA for their 11 year old kid? Yeah, great way to be a parent.
Lockout chip business model (Score:2)
It's funny, I don't think any of our Congressmen and women know that any Joe with a bit of programming knowledge can create a video game.
On which platform? Can "any Joe with a bit of programming knowledge" make games for platforms other than on Windows, Mac OS X, and Windows Mobile? Perhaps the legislation might be targeted to those consoles whose makers can deny any title (and have historically categorically denied all microstudio titles). Other parts of the U.S. code, such as 17 USC 109, already distinguish between PCs and video game consoles.
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Missed his target, apparently. (Score:5, Insightful)
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I mean, as an analogy, it's not really so bad. True, there are no real tubes, but as Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] points out:
The term pipe is a commonly used idiom to refer to a data connection, with pipe size being analogous to bandwidth.[13]
Routers use a data structure called a queue to buffer packets.[14] When packets arrive more quickly than can be forwarded, the router will hold the packets in a queue until they can be sent on to the next router or be dropped.[15] On congested links packets typically spend more time waiting in the queue than they do actually moving down wires or optical fiber. It is the delay of packets in the queue that causes the latency problems that make certain types of services impossible to use (see Network Neutrality).[16]
References available on the Wiki page.
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At least I've gotten some confirmation that I'm not crazy, that my degree did not go to waste--that the specific, ridiculed analogy is actually reasonable. Thanks for that!
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TIA
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Damn, it's probably a hose or a pipe.
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Too vague (Score:2)
Content that was required to be disclosed? Would the Hot Coffee mod have been required to be disclosed? You can't view it through gameplay alone. There is no (demonstrated) bug that woul
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No I don't. But any comparison between the two is like comparing an 8th grade sex ed. class to a porno movie. The same words can be obscene or not, depending upon whether or not they are intended to "titilate". Did Stern play a clip of Oprah's show, or did he "act out" a transcript?
How did this happen? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Lockout chip business model (Score:1)
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I thought that was settled with Tengen and Gauntlet. You can't tell someone they're not allowed to make something for your product. Ipod doohickies are all over the place, as long as they don't use trademarked names. Same thing, no?
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I thought that was settled with Tengen and Gauntlet.
That's still a legal gray area. Nintendo won Atari Games v. Nintendo, forcing Tengen (Atari Games' home division) to stop making games compatible with NES using its lockout defeat method, but Sega lost Sega v. Accolade, allowing Accolade to continue making games compatible with Genesis.
You can't tell someone they're not allowed to make something for your product. Ipod doohickies are all over the place, as long as they don't use trademarked names. Same thing, no?
It's not exactly the same. All video game consoles currently sold in the United States use digital signatures, mangled sectors, and/or other authentication measures to prevent unapproved binaries from executing. Ever try cr
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But wouldn't circumventing a protection scheme (esp
I agree with this law (Score:5, Funny)
Uh, wait, I think I missed something...
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keep it up. (Score:5, Insightful)
WE are the children whose parents swore to us mario would rot our brain and corrupt our souls. we will reject that notion as wholeheartedly as our parents rejected the same assertion back when it was aimed at the Beatles and the Stones.
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We will think differently by then (Score:2)
The current generation of Congress critters were teenagers in the 1960's. If it worked as you said, why aren't drugs legal now?
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What happens now? (Score:4, Interesting)
(almost) Every distributor returns all of the merchandise at the publishers expense. Production facilities have to be retooled for a new release, and new production runs made. All those boxes have to be shipped out to the distributors again. Some of those companies may not be interested in selling the product any more though. Consumers may be less interested in the watered down version. Future releases from that publisher may have difficulty securing distribution.
So... Aren't they already being fined millions of dollars? What's the point of this bill, let capitalism drive the market.
-Rick
what? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Law sounds good... (Score:2)
If those politicians actually want to protect the children they should better try to make ESRB r
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"Trash"? (Score:1)
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Coincidence (Score:5, Funny)
GTA: DC (Score:1)
All those in favor say "Hell yea".
The ERSB ratings suck anyway. (Score:1)
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What might be better could be if another group would start up and give accurate and helpful ratings so people can make informed purchases without having to depend on online reviews.
Online reviews are helpful, but it can be a pain when you see something interesting at the game shop and have to go home to look it up online...
If the Supreme Court did its job (Score:2)
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