California v. The Video Game Industry

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Chaos Knux

Daww, a mother and her foal
AKA: Verifiaman's thread done RIGHT.

Slowtaku, I'm aware.
http://kotaku.com/5678354/all-you-n...olent-video-game-case-in-the-us-supreme-court

Excerpt said:
500x_judgmentday2.jpg


The United States Supreme Court hears its first ever case about video games this week. The stakes are high. Here's what is happening and why it's happening.

The United States Supreme Court is hearing that video game case this week, right? Right. The State of California vs. The Entertainment Merchants Association and Entertainment Software Association (aka "The Video Game Industry"). Oral arguments begin at the Supreme Court in front of Justices Roberts, Thomas, Kagan and the rest on Tuesday at 10am ET.

What's it about, again? Whether violent video games should be treated like pornography — in other words, whether there can be a type of violent video game that would be legal to sell to adults but illegal to sell to kids.
 
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Hehehehe... Hahahahahhahahah... We´re kilometers beyond you ¨Americans¨ in this thread.

In Venezuela, T and M rated games are ilegal, also toy weapons, airsoft and BB guns for kids AND for adults, it is a 3 year sentence for those who sell, import, export (wtf, we don´t even make video games) use, and buy these products, and won´t be able to pay a fiance(if that´s how it´s said in english), wich is ironical, since you can get an only 15 year sentence from premedited murder. In case you don´t believe me, here´s the article, but it´s in spanish.

http://www.analitica.com/va/sociedad/articulos/7828323.asp

Another curious fact is how pirated games, minor robbery and terrain invasion are completely legal and are not questioned in any way.
 
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...note to self, avoid getting on the wrong plane when going to Japan.

get a 3 year sentence without payable fiance
3-years without payable husband-to-be? I think the word you meant to spell is finance. You were only off by one letter, so don't feel too bad.
 
UPDATE
Again, Kotaku, because they have a guy inside the Court.
http://kotaku.com/5678903/supreme-c...st-california-video-game-law?skyline=true&s=i
Excerpt said:
The Supreme Court justices appeared highly skeptical of the State of California's arguments today that certain violent video games should be illegal to buy, questioning whether such exceptions would need to be applied to rap music and even Grimm's fairy tales.

The justices were hearing arguments in California vs. the Entertainment Merchants Association and Entertainment Software Association, a five year battle in the courts that so far has tilted in favor of the video game industry.


The court was full today for the gaming case. Oral arguments kicked off a little after 10 am ET, as the nine Justices took their seats at the bench, in front of attorneys for both sides and a packed gallery. Press, including Kotaku, sat off to the left, near towering columns in the massive classical courthouse. [Read key excerpts from the oral arguments.]


California deputy attorney general Zackery Morazzini started today's one hour session at the U.S. Supreme Court saying that the "deviant level of violence that is presented in a certain of category of video games" requires legal restrictions to protect minors.


Morazzini's opening statement was almost immediately interrupted by Justice Antonin Scalia who pointed out that Grimm's fairy tales are very violent as well.


"Are you going to ban them too?" Scalia asked of the attorney general.
Scalia, one of the court's most conservative justices and most vocal in the questioning of the state today, repeatedly and often with humor questioned Morazznii about the California law and its effects on the first amendment.


"You are asking us to create a whole new prohibition, which the American people never ratified when they ratified the First Amendment... what's next after violence? Drinking? Smoking? Movies that show smoking can't be shown to children?," asked Scalia in the hearing.
"I think what Justice Scalia wants to know is what James Madison thought about video games," Justice Samuel Alito joked.


No one attending ventured a guess.


While not as vigorous in their questioning, the court also pressed the video game industry's resistance to accept any law that would limit the exposure of children to a potentially harmful game. And questioned whether the industry would accept lesser restrictions such as requiring putting violent video games on the top shelf.


Some justices wondered if there was perhaps a valid interest in protecting minors from hyper-violent games.


Imagining a game that allows a player to torture babies, Justice Stephen Breyer asked. "Why isn't it common sense to say a State has the right to say 'Parents if you want that for your 13-year-old, you go buy it yourself?'


While the justices did not betray intimate knowledge of playing games some seemed familiar with the medium. Justice Elena Kagan at one point asked California if Mortal Kombat would be banned under California's law. "Half of the clerks [in the Court] who work for us spend considerable amount of time in their adolescence playing [it]," she said. "I don't know what she's talking about," Scalia quipped.
 
Wow, this court case is actually pretty intriguing. Way to go justices, they seem pretty 'normal' o.o

Thanks for the update chaos. Personally, I don't have a chosen side on the argument, but I still am interested in seeing how this case unfolds.
 
I was shocked to hear of sanity in Washington, too, Ultimate.

Don't mention it, I'l be posting the updates here as kotaku unfolds them.
 
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