Study Finds Games Stores Still Selling to Minors 81
A study funded by the National Institute on Media and the Family (NIMF) has found that almost half of all games retailers are still selling 'M'-rated games to kids. "The two-month undercover survey, which covered 60 US retailers, found that underage teens were able to buy games rated M for Mature (17+) at 46 percent of stores, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune ... the findings of the survey still put the game industry ahead of many other entertainment sectors, including the movie and music industries."
I for one say so what (Score:3, Interesting)
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When has this been tested in court?
Oh and don't worry the OMG protect the children people will make gaming stores lives so complicated that they may stop selling M rated games all together.
They will just sue the stores. Get local politions to pass laws that the stores will then have to take to court...
The stores better police themselves oreelse things will be ugly.
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Well... (Score:5, Insightful)
The only way to sort out this out would be for people to stop assuming that games are for kids - but who knows when that's going to be.
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IDs? (Score:3, Insightful)
The two-month undercover survey [...] found that underage teens were able to buy games rated M for Mature (17+) at 46 percent of stores
How are they supposed to enforce that anyways? By asking kids their ID? How are you supposed to tell a 17-year old who looks like he's 14 from a 14 year old who looks like he's 17?
Re:IDs? (Score:4, Informative)
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The fun part is that (so I've read) the law would impose fines of thousands of dollars as well as charging the offender with a felony of some sort, for selling Mature video games to minors. It seems the penalty for (first offense) selling alcohol to minors is a
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Wait... no I didn't. Alcohol is not like games.
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My point was, how are you gonna require an ID from a 17 year old?
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Here, showing ID is mandatory for movies even if the movie theater agents don't follow the law.
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This is not intended to contradict the "so what?" crowd...ultimately ratings are only useful as a way for non-gaming parents to filter what their kids can play.
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I'm part of the "who cares" crowd. The only way this affects me is my tax dollars that go into these useless studies. It isn't illegal, why are we spending our money on this shxt? When it becomes illegal then knock yourselves out on your little sting operations.
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More like parents who don't give a damn about actual parenting. What your child can and can't handle comes down to the actual child, I myself could play violent sexual video games without it fazing me in the slightest, and I don't feel the urge to go kill or rape someone.
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But you can't require 17-year olds to have an ID or a driving license!
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The mere concept of a 16 year old not getting a license a day after turning 16 is probably unconsciously dismissed by almost all Americans. Even if you are unlikely to be allowed to drive you are very likely to be treated like a loser for not having a license.
If you actually tried to make the argument "but what if they don't ha
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Ha! You're wrong! [wikipedia.org] lol.
"In the United States, the driving age is determined by the state or territory, with the most common age being sixteen. The minimum age for a license varies from 14 years 3 months to 18 years."
That means that not all 17 year olds can be expected to have licenses.
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In which state can you not at least get a restricted driver's license at age 17? I didn't see one, and I'm guessing your extensive research didn't unearth one either.
But that's beside the point. The post you responded to was not seriously arguing that every single 17 year old in America has a driver's license and for you to take it to such an extreme is a little childish. Many, if not most 17 year olds do have an license and anyone who is mature enough to handle a "Mature" game can be
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Doesn't change much. It's only a couple of examples that happen to be in the few area's which I already noted as exceptions (like New York City).
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Now, mind you, it sounds more fascist than it is. It's one of those "just in case" laws. Never happened to me. Happened to a friend who was waiting for his girlfriend in front of a jeweler's. The idea behind it is tha
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Other countries have national ID cards that also apply to minors, so it is reasonable to expect you have some state ID with you.
But if there is no legal requirement an ID, and you have no need for a driver license (i.e.: you do not own/drive a car), assuming you magically have a driver license does not follow. For minors, that situation is far more likely.
Not sure it is a big deal - but it reminds me of the '
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The same applies to drinking. You aren't forced to have an ID when you are 21, but you can't expect to go into a liquor store and have them take your word for it. And it also applies to your example of credit-card verification. You aren't forced as a citizen to have a credit-card, but your r
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And the rest of society has significant trouble dealing with the exceptions - have you tried opening a bank account without a 'driver's license' at hand? Depending on the IQ of the clerk, convincing them of accepting other government-issued IDs (e.g.: passport) can be difficult / impossible.
Now, if that's a policy set by a private business, then you're right and there is no issue: just do business elsewhere, if you really need
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You may not be 'forced' to get an ID, but your life is made pretty darn difficult.
Honestly, I don't have a problem with that since by not having an ID you're making everyone else's lives more difficult. The rest of us shouldn't have to suffer for the minority who for whatever obscure (and probably misguided) reason don't want to have ID.
And the rest of society has significant trouble dealing with the exceptions - have you tried opening a bank account without a 'driver's license' at hand? Depending on the IQ of the clerk, convincing them of accepting other government-issued IDs (e.g.: passport) can be difficult / impossible.
Case in point. Why expect banks, bars, etc. to handle more forms of ID if it isn't necessary? That brings up the cost for the rest of us who aren't being intransigent, and I don't want to have to pay for that (or wait in line behind such a person).
But when the policy is a regulation by government or commerce authorities, you do not have that option - implicitly you are requiring the driver license for completely unrelated transactions.At that point, you might just institute a national ID system and be done with it - or it just gets absurd and inefficient over time.
A na
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a) more shifty
b) like you're trying to grow a beard to look older
I almost never got carded when I was clean shaven.
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Yes. Exactly like that. You mention it as if it was something unthinkable. If a minor wants to get an M-rated or 17+ rated game, tough luck. Let him bring his parents to buy it.
If he's an adult, well, he can go back home and get some ID, can't he?
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If a minor wants to get an M-rated or 17+ rated game, tough luck.
Yeah but if you're 17, you're a minor, and you're allowed to buy the game tho. That's the difference between 17+ and 18+ that prompted my comment.
If he's an adult, well, he can go back home and get some ID, can't he?
And if he's not an adult?
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17 year olds are likely to have ID on them for the same reason that anyone else has one on them. Licenses are common, are available, and they're nice to have if you feel like driving around in a legal fashion.
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If he's an adult, well, he can go back home and get some ID, can't he?
And if he's not an adult?
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He shouldn't be sold the game? Are you doing this on purpose?
You retard, 17+ means you can buy the game if you're 17, that means a minor, that means not an adult (in some states you're not an adult before 21 anyways), that means he should be sold the game.
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If you are 17 you won't have an ID because you aren't old enough to have one.
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Thanks, although I'm not sure my claim is correct, as I'm only French, but after all it seems that most Americans around here ignore the fact that in some states you can only have a driver license at the age of 18, let alone be an adult only at 21.
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There are within maybe a few miles of my parent's home, approximately a dozen game retailers. ALL of them employ staffs comprised of mostly teenage high school kids or those out of high school less than 2 years.
Am I surprised that they sell to their younger friends/relatives. Not in the least.
Priorities (Score:3, Insightful)
And yes I know this is a study by a group studying media.
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Problems are different to everyone. What is important to you isn't important to me, and vice versa. What's the deal with selling booze to kids anyway? Shouldn't it be up to the parents to control and decide whether or not their children are mature enough for alcohol, and if so, how much?
Smoking and porn too, I suppose. Hell, why do we have a restriction on any of that?
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To a certain extent but you're ignoring the fact that alcohol is a poison which damages a child's liver and require them to have a transplant if they're lucky or die if they're not. We all know how stupid some people can get and it's a good idea to have laws against stuff that can kill children because of a parents ignorance.
I don't think drinking and playing violent games
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But, of course, we have the odd exception cases (i.e. most of Europe), where the drinking age does not exist, yet alcohol abuse amongst use is not pandemic. I know many an European family where tradition had kids enjoying a bit of wine at dinner with their folks, or champagne at New Year's, or any number of such situations.
America's alcohol problem is not an *alcohol* problem per se, but rather a cultural one, where abuse is cool and getting your stomach pumped is treated like a rite of passage. Take away
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Consequently we have children trying to defy the taboo, just like they
Study finds... (Score:2)
Mod me lame?
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I know that with enough statistics, you can prove any point you want. Still, it's nice not to rely on common sense for once.
Selling games to minors? (Score:1)
Welcome to the digital age (Score:2)
I was denied entry a few months before my birthday to a movie, so I went home pirated it and enjoyed it.
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Pornographic games? (Score:1)
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And that's also one of the reasons why these game laws are unconstitutional. They must apply to all media or none.
Waiting for Jack Thompson to Show Up (Score:2)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiT2cbyRtAI [youtube.com] (Great video on Jack Thompson)
This would hurt him more than help him. (Score:2)
It just proves that the gaming industries ratings work better than any other out there and that self regulation within the gaming industry is tip top and working a-ok.
This Just In! (Score:1)
Does TFA tell us which stores? (Score:1)
Because they're sure as snot not around my home city. I'm tired of getting carded to buy a game when I'm nearly two decades past the "sell-to" age. :P
They're lying... (Score:2)
IM 25 AN THEY CARD ME ALWAYS! (Score:1)