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Supreme Court Strikes Down California Law

We won, guys.

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In a 7-2 decision announced early today, the U.S. Supreme Court decided to defend the Constitutional rights of games.

The court struck down the California law from 2005 that would have made selling violent video games to minors illegal, essentially placing the medium into the same category as pornography.

The court opinion was written by Justice Scalia. Justices Kennedy, Ginsburg, Sotomayor, Roberts and Kagan agreed. Justices Thomas and Bryer filed dissenting opinions.

"The Act does not comport with the First Amendment," reads the decision. "Video games qualify for First Amendment protection. Like protected books, plays, and movies, they communicate ideas through familiar literary devices and features distinctive to the medium. And the basic principles of freedom of speech...do not vary with a new and different communication medium."

Given that the courts have not blocked violent content in other mediums, California was unable prove why the interactive nature of video games was different than music and movies. The court was also not persuaded by the evidence provided regarding the psychological impact of games. In fact, the court found it curious California would not include other kinds of media under this law.

"Psychological studies purporting to show a connection between exposure to violent video games and harmful effects on children do not prove that such exposure causes minors to act aggressively," said the court. "Any demonstrated effects are both small and indistinguishable from effects produced by other media."

The court agreed with the video game industry that the existing self regulatory board, the Entertainment Software Rattings Board, was doing its job--the government wasn't needed.

"Banning violent games would have necessitated bans elsewhere," argued the court. "California’s argument would fare better if there were a longstanding tradition in this country of specially restricting children’s access to depictions of violence, but there is none. Certainly the books we give children to read--or read to them when they are younger--contain no shortage of gore."

As for the interactive nature of the medium, the court (rather hilariously) pointed to choose-your-own adventure books as evidence that such entertainment already exists.

At points, the court--Scalia, specifically--seems to mock the California law. If video games are such a harm, why would California not go further in preventing society from engaging with them?

== TEASER ==
The interactive nature of games was not a compelling argument for most of the court.
The interactive nature of games was not a compelling argument for most of the court.

"The Act is also seriously underinclusive in another respect--and a respect that renders irrelevant the contentions of the concurrence and the dissents that video games are qualitatively different from other portrayals of violence. The California Legislature is perfectly willing to leave this dangerous, mind-altering material in the hands of children so long as one parent (or even an aunt or uncle) says it’s OK. And there are not even any requirements as to how this parental or avuncular relationship is to be verified; apparently the child’s or putative parent’s, aunt’s, or uncle’s say-so suffices. That is not how one addresses a serious social problem."

That ultimately became one half of the court's real problem with California's proposal. If this is a serious social harm, the law doesn't go far enough, as it doesn't restrict other mediums. Combined with the potential infringements on First Amendment rights, it had to be struck down.

"The overbreadth in achieving one goal is not cured by the underbreadth in achieving the other," the court concluded. "Legislation such as this, which is neither fish nor fowl, cannot survive strict scrutiny."

In Justice Alito's concurrence, however, he voiced some disagreement, wondering why the court would be so quick to believe a new medium deserves the same protections as the old ones.

"We should make every effort to understand the new technology," said Alito. We should take into account the possibility that developing technology may have important societal implications that will become apparent only with time. We should not jump to the conclusion that new technology is fundamentally the same as some older thing with which we are familiar. [...] There are reasons to suspect that the experience of playing violent video games just might be very different from reading a book, listening to the radio, or watching a movie or a television show."

The ESRB is enough of a self-regulatory body, argued the majority's opinion.
The ESRB is enough of a self-regulatory body, argued the majority's opinion.

In fact, Alito left the door wide open for another challenge.

"I would hold only that the particular law at issue here fails to provide the clear notice that the Constitution requires," said Alito. "I would not squelch legislative efforts to deal with what is perceived by some to be a significant and developing social problem. If differently framed statutes are enacted by the States or by the Federal Government, we can consider the constitutionality of those laws when cases challenging them are presented to us."

While Alito sided with the majority (with a critique), Justice Thomas and Justice Breyer were the two dissenting votes. Thomas argued that, back to the founders, children require special treatment. For several pages, Thomas performs a history lesson of the country's prior views of raising children. Thomas believed the California law hardly infringed upon First Amendment rights.

"All that the law does is prohibit the direct sale or rental of a violent video game to a minor by someone other than the minor’s parent, grandparent, aunt, uncle, or legal guardian," said Thomas. "Where a minor has a parent or guardian, as is usually true, the law does not prevent that minor from obtaining a violent video game with his parent’s or guardian’s help. In the typical case, the only speech affected is speech that bypasses a minor’s parent or guardian. Because such speech does not fall within 'the freedom of speech' as originally understood, California’s law does not ordinarily implicate the First Amendment and is not facially unconstitutional."

Breyer's dissent cites numerous psychological studies favoring that games cause more harm than other media. In the majority opinion, the court rejected California's claims to this.

"This case is ultimately less about censorship than it is about education," wrote Breyer. "Our Constitution cannot succeed in securing the liberties it seeks to protect unless we can raise future generations committed cooperatively to mak­ing our system of government work. Education, however, is about choices. Sometimes, children need to learn by making choices for themselves. Other times, choices are made for children--by their parents, by their teachers, and by the people acting democratically through their governments. In my view, the First Amendment does not disable government from helping parents make such a choice here--a choice not to have their children buy ex­tremely violent, interactive video games, which they more than reasonably fear pose only the risk of harm to those children."

For now, however, games are protected speech, an important victory for the medium.

"Reading Dante is unquestionably more cultured and intellectually edifying than playing Mortal Kombat," reads one of the footnotes in the majority opinion. "But these cultural and intellectual differences are not constitutional ones. Crudely violent video games, tawdry TV shows, and cheap novels and magazines are no less forms of speech than The Divine Comedy, and restrictions upon them must survive strict scrutiny."

Amen.

You can read the entire court opinion, including dissents, right over here.

Patrick Klepek on Google+

456 Comments

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natetodamax

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Edited By natetodamax

That's great to hear

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PXAbstraction

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Edited By PXAbstraction

I wonder if Leland Yee will stop wasting taxpayer money to wage pointless wars against industries and will get back to actual governing now.
 
Yeah, I know he won't either.

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Arath

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Edited By Arath

Makes me swell with pride!

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MrHurrDerr

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Edited By MrHurrDerr

Fantastic break down of the ruling. Great news indeed.

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Krampus

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Time for a celebration beer!  At 11 am on a Monday!

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kotetsu

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Edited By kotetsu

Amazing news! Thank christ this didnt pass, or else this would have effected much more than just the US.

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Tennmuerti

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Edited By Tennmuerti

@Gremmel said:

Living in an actual free society (Sweden) where women don't get arrested for having miss-carriages and where you can walk around in the streets without at any time having to "provide papers", I'm not really sure America still knows what freedom actually is. On a side note, when I as younger I yearned to go to USA one day, but seeing how you've treated foreigners over the past ten years or even your own citizens I'm actually to afraid to go there now. Imprisoning people without trials is such a front to humanity it's staggering just to mention one thing.

However selling Saints Row 3 to a unsupervised five year old is borderline child abuse I think. You actually don't develop real human sympathy or the ability to differentiate between right and wrong until you're around nine, some even later at around 12-13 years of age. You can't sell drugs (whatever you got that's legal) and guns to them so why this is a good thing I'm not getting.

That Americans freak out more about sex than actual violence in media is just silly to the point of sad.

Just to clarify I'm not saying any five years old kid shouldn't be allowed to play Saint's Row 3, but without parents/guardian there to actually teach them what morality is, the least the government can do, is to not allow those games to be sold to *minors.

*Appropriate age limitations not based on a politicians whim but actual current (non biased) psychological studies.

You mean the same free Sweeden that deems Manga child pornography and will fine you for possessing it as it would for actual child pornography?

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left4doof

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Edited By left4doof
@cobra88king8: Its not illegal but most stores don't do it
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HitmanAgent47

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Hell yeah, whoever voted for this bill, is not being objective for the 2 votes on there.

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rapid

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Edited By rapid

Victory is ours!! Well at least for now anyway.... I'm glad at least most of the Supreme Court believe Video Games are just like Books, Movies, and the Radio.  
 
What I wonder of the people who believe Video Games are just as "bad" as pornography which of them actually plays games and what games are they using to make this comparison? 
Surely they can't be still using the Age Old example of GTA??? ><''  

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RobotHamster

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Edited By RobotHamster

Video games win... FATALITY!

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sreya92

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Edited By sreya92

Damn you know those California representatives pushing this bill feel stupid when even the Supreme Court start making fun of them. Honestly, leave us the hell alone. One wacko who kills someone because he can't play video games does not define an entire group of people. I thought we were supposed to be over stereotyping... 

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HubrisRanger

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@Gremmel

Leaving anti-American commentary aside, I feel the need to clarify a flaw in your (and a couple other people's) logic: video games are not being sold en-mass to minors. The fact is that the ESRB has been found, time and time again, to be the most effective self-regulating board in America (including the MPAA) of keeping age inappropriate material out of the hands of minors. Retailer-specific policies regulate who they sell video games for, and on an individual basis identify paying customers as being age appropriate. This is desirable over government regulation for a whole slew of reasons, chief among them that it gives the creators of the games the freedom to express themselves without the fear of being labeled obscene by their legislators. Keep in mind that even with government intervention, the AO rating from the ESRB (again, a self-regulating independent body) is the effective kiss of death for any game. THAT is where truly obscene material, pornographic or otherwise, ends up and the system has worked rather effectively for everyone involved.

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metalsnakezero

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Edited By metalsnakezero

Glad to get a official word on this. M rated games can live on. Now if you excuse me, I'll be buying a copy of Shadows of the damned without a problem. 

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PerfidiousSinn

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We've been wasting time and taxpayer money settling THIS shit?!

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musubi

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I think I might still have some faith yet in the US Lawmaking system yet.

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armaan8014

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PARTY TIME!!

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McGriddle550

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FUCK YEAH!!!!!!!

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sandwich_adjustment

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@Sliced_Bread said:

2 people played Duke.

ha

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dr_mantas

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YES MOTHERFUCKING YES WOOOOO

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Chubbaluphigous

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Edited By Chubbaluphigous

This is the best write up I have found about this so far.  Good job. 
 
Oh, and to all the crazy people who thought this thing would pass, "I told you so".

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HairyMike87

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Edited By HairyMike87

People could have just gotten their parents or someone older to buy a game for them if this had passed through. It's not a big deal to me. Maybe because I'm 24. 

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pkhilson

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WWWWWWOOOOOOOOOOOOO

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linkster7

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Edited By linkster7

Great write up Patrick.

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Kyodra

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Edited By Kyodra

I don't understand how this law passing would've been a bad thing. Most European countries have laws in place that don't allow shops to sell games to minors if the game is rated M, which I can agree with. The parents are free to buy any games (even violent ones) for their children though, because ultimately it should be the parents responsibility what their children play.

Can 10 year old kids in the US go to R-rated films by themselves? If not then I don't see what would be wrong with limiting kids getting access to violent video games as well without their parents allowing it.

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jeffgoldblum

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It's moments like these that allow even a cynical bastard like me to love my country.

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drstrawberry

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Fuck yes!!!

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Nasar7

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Edited By Nasar7
@HairyMike87: That was one of the Supreme Court's criticisms as well. Basically they struck this down for being half-assed and disingenuous.
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kmg90

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Edited By kmg90
@HubrisRanger said:

@Gremmel

Leaving anti-American commentary aside, I feel the need to clarify a flaw in your (and a couple other people's) logic: video games are not being sold en-mass to minors. The fact is that the ESRB has been found, time and time again, to be the most effective self-regulating board in America (including the MPAA) of keeping age inappropriate material out of the hands of minors. Retailer-specific policies regulate who they sell video games for, and on an individual basis identify paying customers as being age appropriate. This is desirable over government regulation for a whole slew of reasons, chief among them that it gives the creators of the games the freedom to express themselves without the fear of being labeled obscene by their legislators. Keep in mind that even with government intervention, the AO rating from the ESRB (again, a self-regulating independent body) is the effective kiss of death for any game. THAT is where truly obscene material, pornographic or otherwise, ends up and the system has worked rather effectively for everyone involved.

exactly the industry is great at regulating the content that's released on various platforms.  Nintendo and Sony DO NOT allow any Adult Only games to published and retails also have similar policy so developers have a ceiling in which they can not touch in terms of obscene content, while the movie industry and music industry can release UNRATED, UNCUT, DIRECTORS CUT to retails and there really much of established policy that prevents underaged kids from aquire such content in stores. 
 
ESRB never should of used tiger woods for an ad campaign   
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jorbear

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Edited By jorbear

@Kyodra said:

I don't understand how this law passing would've been a bad thing. Most European countries have laws in place that don't allow shops to sell games to minors if the game is rated M, which I can agree with. The parents are free to buy any games (even violent ones) for their children though, because ultimately it should be the parents responsibility what their children play.

Can 10 year old kids in the US go to R-rated films by themselves? If not then I don't see what would be wrong with limiting kids getting access to violent video games as well without their parents allowing it.

The U.S. already prohibits the sale of M-rated games to minors. This proposed law would have made it a crime for parents to purchase M-rated games for minors entirely.

Rated-R movies work the same way. You can watch it if a parent or guardian is there.

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Myomoto

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Edited By Myomoto

@Kyodra: It's a matter of giving up control of content rating to an entity outside of the industry that's scary in this context.

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Rasgueado

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Edited By Rasgueado

Was anyone *really* concerned about this decision going the other way? This business makes too much money for that.

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Klaimore

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Edited By Klaimore

Cool.

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Lifendz

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Good article. Glad the court got it right.

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Tordah

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Good news, everyone!

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MrHammeh

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Edited By MrHammeh

That really is a relief, I can only imagine the changes that would of come to video games to try and attain a wider audience to sell to as greed seems to prevail in the game industry with big name publishers. Video Games 1 Fascists 0. =P

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234r2we232

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So this means I'll still be hearing whiny brats screaming at me while playing Gears Of War? Great...

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Boiglenoight

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"In fact, the court found it curious California would not include other kinds of media under this law." Indeed, while I support the court's decision, perhaps restricting Ayn Rand's works to 34 and older would lessen the number of selfish a-holes running around town.

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Cirdain

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Edited By Cirdain

Supreme Court slapped California like it's their bitch.

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JoeyRavn

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We few, we happy few...

... we band of brothers!

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A_Wet_Shamwow

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Edited By A_Wet_Shamwow
@keef: or have people play bioshock.
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emem

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Edited By emem

It always amazes me to hear/read that porn is worse than violence in the US.

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Altersparck

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Maybe Leland Yee will finally quit wasting his time and Californians' tax dollars on anti-game legislation.

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rmanthorp

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Edited By rmanthorp  Moderator

Aww yeah!

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skronk

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Whoop whoop!

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Thompson820

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@Cirdain said:

Supreme Court slapped California like it's their bitch.

California is the Supreme Court's bitch. Every state is.

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nizo182

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VICTORY!
 Oh yeah!
 Oh yeah!
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Brackynews

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Edited By Brackynews

Splendid article Patrick. Amen.