Twilight_guy said:
I cant help feeling like everyone is going a bit overboard in celebrating this. I mean people are acting like Lincoln just declared the slaves free. Its a victory but lets have some perspective.
Also, does that mean someone can make a porn game and sell it to minors without any restrictions?
Well, this for us is a legal declaration that the games are legally speech, with all the implications therein. So yes, it is a big step for our medium.
However the larger implications of this are for minor rights and freedom of speech in general, which makes the case noteworthy for all media. If you read the vote and opinion breakdowns what you will realize is that this case wasn't REALLY about video games. It was about the rights of minors, and the implications are far reaching.
rossatdi said:
Marc Gibson said:
Why not? If the Supreme Court says that there can't be an age limit on game retail that assumes children of any age have the right to own and therefore play any game they want.
I think you're a little confused about what the Supreme Court does in the United States. That's not a dig at you. I'm not up on British, Australian or German jurisprudence myself given that I'm not really affected one way or the other by the court systems of those countries. What the Supreme Court did was rule that a particular law was unconstitutional. It doesn't preclude retailers from refusing to sell certain games to minors nor does it stop parents from keeping their children from playing certain games, watching certain movies or even reading certain books. In this particular case, it just prevents the government from taking an action that violates the 1st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
Well having studied US politics whilst living in the US for several years as well as writing my master dissertation on an element of US politics I don't feel too unqualified.
What the Supreme Court did was establish precedence for the 1st Amendment to apply to minors in the case of violent media. Yes, this is what happened to cinema regulation (technically its self-regulated/optional in the US but most cinemas use the system). I support age regulation for violent media on the condition of hitting age of legal consent (whatever that is regionally) you have full legal privilege to the have access to unlimited depths of filth.
Age classification in the UK is legally established and it hasn't lead to vast censorship of what we can view, it just makes sense to stop adult material reaching minors - and legally enforcing that is fine.[/quote]
No, it's not fine. Frankly I consider the idea that government has to protect children from particular types of ideas extremely backwards. Deciding what ideas people may or may not consume is extremely authoritarian and leads to many unfortunate implications, regardless of who the material is targeting.
Children already have protection against consuming material that is inappropriate for them, their parents. But once the government steps in and usurps parental authority as occurred in this case, then you get what amounts to censorship (due to the chilling effect that the restrictions would have if passed).
More importantly, in order to do this, the court would have to establish the ability to dynamically create new categories of unprotected speech, an incredibly dangerous road. If they did in fact rule that video games were unprotected speech this would regulate them eternally to children's toys in terms of governmental thought.
I've long been disappointed by Australia's game rating system (which does in fact amount to censorship due to the lack of an M rating) and Germany's system (which again, amounts to censorship), and frankly the more I read about European video game regulation, the more backwards it seems.