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California AG Wants US Supreme Court to Regulate Violent Games

Heads up to all you young gamers out there -- California Attorney General Jerry Brown is taking his anti-video game crusade all the way to the United States Supreme Court. On Wednesday, Mr. Brown petitioned the nation's highest court to uphold a proposed California state law banning the sale or rental of violent games to children.

According to the LA Times, a federal district court shot down the law back in 2007 because of that pesky 1st Amendment. Just this February, an appeals court subsequently upheld the 2007 ruling. Is that enough to stop Brown? Nope. He's taking the fight all the way to Washington, which would be the first gaming regulation case to make it to the Supreme Court, although we doubt it'll get that far -- eight other similar cases from other states have tried and failed.

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Computers

Law Protecting Children from 'Harmful' Content Deemed Unconstitutional

Law Protecting Children from
The Child Online Protection Act (COPA) was passed in 1998 following a similar law that was struck down as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. COPA, which never went into effect, would have made it illegal for Web sites to make sexual or objectionable content available to minors.

The challenge was handled by the ACLU on behalf of a coalition of writers, artists, educators, and the Salon Media Group. The federal appeals court that handed down the ruling agreed with the decision of a lower court that struck down the law on the grounds that it violated the First Amendment and was overly broad and vague.

The law would have essentially forced all U.S.-based Web sites to provide only "family friendly" content since there is no effective barrier for keeping minors locked out of a Web site. Additionally, this law wouldn't affect overseas-based sites, which are not subject to U.S. law. John Morris, from the Center for Democracy & Technology, argued that filters and parental controls are not only less restrictive, but are also more effective at protecting children from objectionable content since they can be applied to Web pages hosted internationally as well.

The Justice Department may take the case to the Supreme Court, where, in 2004, justices agreed that COPA was unconstitutional, but sent the case back to the lower courts to determine if advances in filtering technology would affect the law's constitutionality. [Source: CBS and USA Today]

Video Games

Ex Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor Designing Video Game

Former Justice Sandra Day O'Connor Designing Video GameWhen former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor stepped down from the highest bench in the nation and went into retirement in 2005, she was all but guaranteed a raft of speaking engagements, thanks to her years as one of the most influential people in the nation. Few would have pegged her as a future video game designer, however. But video games are exactly what she's working on now: O'Connor is currently spearheading a project to create an educational game about America's justice system.

The game, due out September of next year, will be called 'Our Courts' and is being developed with James Paul Gee, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. According to O'Connor, the game will enable kids to "step into the shoes of a judge, a legislator, an executive -- teach them how to think through and analyze problems, take action and voice opinions to their elected representatives."

All this sounds nice and educational, but we're not sure exactly where the "game" (a.k.a. "fun") part comes in, and it's hard to imagine kids learning much more here than they would through a book. But, hey, we won't judge a game by its packaging entirely -- we're hoping that learning the important lessons about the US justice system turn out to be a ball! American sorely needs it. [Source: Wired Life]

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