Alzrius
The EN World kitten
SteelDraco said:I don't buy that. It's not like Sony and Nintendo were unclear on things. If a game gets an AO rating, you can't use their consoles, and the specific materials and code needed to make that game run. The makers of this game don't have the right to use that code however they see fit; they're subject to contracts with the granting companies. They knew that going into things. Sony and Nintendo obviously feel that they will make more money in the long run if they don't allow AO games on their consoles. And that's their decision to make. That's like claiming that someone can spray graffiti all over my wall, because it's free speech. It isn't - it's my wall. You want to do that, go find your own wall.
There were no contracts here. And the decision that they'll make more money from having such policies doesn't mean that such policies are ethical. A more correct example is that you allow people to graffiti on your wall, except if they're wearing a hat at the time. The hat can be removed, just like the rating can be changed, but it's an arbitrary unilateral restriction. And no one, as a note, ever lost money by not being able to graffiti; a company does lose money if it can't effectively market its product.
The only way this is going to happen is if people refuse to shop at the stores that censor their merchandise. These are businesses - if they find out that doing something else will be more profitable, that's what they're going to do.
Doing whatever will make the most money isn't an excuse for trying to shut out artistic expression that you don't like.
Those guidelines exist for two reasons. First, it's because the software industry wanted to avoid having the government step in, and impose some outside ratings system on them. Second, it's because somebody high-up in the retailers decided that it would be more profitable in the long run. The retailers think that the family market is bigger than the Adults Only market. Carrying AO stuff might cut into Family sales, so the AO stuff goes away. These are market pressures.
No one is debating the usefulness of having a rating system. It's when companies all make a decision that anything rated a certain way won't be sold by them. That not only undercuts the review process, but it unfairly threatens the companies that make the game to begin with, and denies the consumers the chance to purchase what they want. Market pressures are not an acceptable reason for that.
As to the stuff about minorities, I don't feel that's particularly relevant to the topic, or appropriate for this board.
It's not political, or religious, so it seems okay for the boards. As for the relevancy, it's about businesses declaring a certain category of anything, be it products or people, to not be in their own, or the public's, best interest not to do business with. Discrimination is discrimination, whether against people or art.