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  1. #1
    Student Fighter Fei's Avatar
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    Anyone in Oklahoma: I feel sorry for you.

    http://www.gamespot.com/news/6152609.html

    Okla. game bill signed into law
    Governor signs HB3004, making games with "inappropriate violence" harmful to minors; such titles will be subject to same restrictions as sexually explicit magazines, videos.
    By Brendan Sinclair, GameSpot
    Posted Jun 10, 2006 3:38 pm PT

    Democratic Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry yesterday signed into law HB3004, which revises the state's definition of what is harmful to minors to include games with "inappropriate violence." Previously, the only content that would qualify something as harmful to minors involved sex or sadomasochistic abuse.

    Henry criticized violence in games that he said had grown "to epic proportions" in a statement. He added, "While parents have the ultimate responsibility for what their children do and see, this legislation is another tool to ensure that our young people are not saturated in violence. This gives parents the power to more closely regulate which games their children play."

    Under the law, no person, not even a minors' parents or guardians, would be allowed to give or show them an inappropriately violent game. Retailers would also not be able to have such games on display where minors could see them, unless the lower two-thirds of the boxes were hidden behind "blinder racks," of the sort commonly used for sexually explicit magazines.

    The law defines "inappropriate violence" as any depiction in a game that, when taken as a whole, has the following characteristics:
    "a. the average person eighteen (18) years of age or older applying contemporary community standards would find that the interactive video game or computer software is patently offensive to prevailing standards in the adult community with respect to what is suitable for minors, and
    b. the interactive video game or computer software lacks serious literary, scientific, medical, artistic, or political value for minors based on, but not limited to, the following criteria:
    (1) is glamorized or gratuitous,
    (2) is graphic violence used to shock or stimulate,
    (3) is graphic violence that is not contextually relevant to the material,
    (4) is so pervasive that it serves as the thread holding the plot of the material together,
    (5) trivializes the serious nature of realistic violence,
    (6) does not demonstrate the consequences or effects of realistic violence,
    (7) uses brutal weapons designed to inflict the maximum amount of pain and damage,
    (8) endorses or glorifies torture or excessive weaponry, or
    (9) depicts lead characters who resort to violence freely"

    While the definition of inappropriate violence specifies that it must take place in a game, the new definition of "harmful to minors" specifies "any description, exhibition, presentation or representation, in whatever form [emphasis added], of inappropriate violence." This means that video footage showing the violent gameplay, a review of the game in question, or even a newspaper editorial decrying the violence in the game would be classified as harmful to minors, according to a lawyer GameSpot consulted on the matter.

    Several weeks ago, GameSpot interviewed the bill's co-author, Republican Representative Fred Morgan, and asked if that was the bill's original intent. At the time he said he needed to examine the language of the bill before answering, but later on commented that he did not agree with that interpretation.

    Neither the state nor national branches of the American Civil Liberties Union returned GameSpot's phone calls regarding the law. The Entertainment Software Association was not available for comment, but is almost certain to file suit in this case, as it has in California, Illinois, Minnesota, Washington, and other states where restrictive gaming legislation has been passed.

    The law is slated to go into effect November 1.
    And that's the kind of thing your state taxes are funding. Feels nice doesn't it
    "There are certain things in this world that you're happier not knowing.
    Even lies and deceptions can become the truth for some people of the earth.
    ... Particularly those not knowing the true nature of things, or how these systems of things works." - Bishop Stone "Xenogears"

  2. #2
    Awesome user with default custom title The Heretic Azazel's Avatar
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    Awesome.

    Christian tools unite!
    "They call it 'The American Dream' because you have to be asleep to believe it" - George Carlin

  3. #3
    Sexfiend Terracosmo's Avatar
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    I

    HATE

    PEOPLE

    (this said in a monotone and gigantic Juggernaut kind of way, followed up by me grabbing a mace and going berserk)

  4. #4
    Missing Nin BioAlien's Avatar
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    i hope such a crap law never arrive here in Canada...

    what is so bad about violance in a GAME!, it's a game damn it, it is made to have fun and do thing we would never do in reality, that all the fault of those son of a bitch retarded moron that do crime in the real world and then accuse the games that made them to it.

    what next? pokemon being illegal for having too much violance in it too?!


    (also agree with what Terra just said lol)

  5. #5
    Sexfiend Terracosmo's Avatar
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    This is how I feel when I read things like this.



    (Well, progressively anyway.)

  6. #6
    Awesome user with default custom title RedX1z's Avatar
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    i think i speak for all of us, when i say "what the fuck?!". they can't blame this on games, violence is everywhere. i just hope it doesn't happen anywhere else, though i'm not a minor and shouldn't really care, but i feel the pain of the little people.

    yet, i think most of the blame should go to movies, but not that it really matters now. but restricting that would be a pain in the ass as well.
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  7. #7
    Vampiric Minion Kraco's Avatar
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    Hmm... When I look at the game cases I have lying around, there are those age limit markings already. Just like in movies. Some even have a figure of a fist next to the age limit symbolising the game contains explicit violence (I think that's what it's for). I think these marking are very good and relevant. Again just like in movies.

    But treating them life porn magazines is just bizarre and inane. I bet the people designing and signing that law have never actually played games - most likely they have just been under pressure by some looney housewifes (or even spinsters).

  8. #8
    Oh a perfect topic for a 350th post! This is Grade A bullshit, I've been bitching about things like this for a few years but I never imagined someone would tak it this far...treating violent games like pornography...wraping up the games in paper so 'kids' can't see them. What is this supposed to solve, other than giving kids even less outlets for anger rage and frustration. For some reason America is starting to accept the idea that violence and sexuality aren't normal parts of human nature and they think that if they eliminate as much overt violence as possible all the problems of the world will go away.

    Somehow we're forgetting that long before video games, TV, and movies people still raped, they still murdered, and they still did it just because they felt like doing it at the time. We can blame whatever we want, but if you take a perfectly good person, and put them under enough pressure, they'll react with violence. They don't need to have seen it on a video game either, it's just in us. Maybe someday this country will accept that and try educate kids well. Instead of ignoring them and trying to make a world where kids can just figure everything in life out on their own in perfect safety, with no supervision needed from adults. This world can't be lived in by adults, because the adult world isn't safe, and tossing kids into it defenseless is as good as societal suicide.

    That's where I think this country is headed, toward the dream that everyone will be exactly the same, never do anything but work and consume and there will be no need to waste time or attention on little things like children because the work and consume world will be so safe and peaceful that the kids can just train themselves

    :::::NEWSFLASH::::::
    This isn't the fucking garden of Eden! Innocence was lost a long time ago, and no amount of repression or denial can ever bring it back.

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