Thursday, May 9th 2019
US Senator Proposes a Ban on "Manipulative" Video Games
Yesterday, a US senator called Josh Hawley announced a bill to legalize banning of so-called "manipulative" video game design in the United States. The decision was proposed yesterday to US Congress.
The "Protecting Children from Abusive Games Act" would prohibit all games geared towards children, that implement a "pay to win" model where a player is progressing through the game by paying for it. The Senator also added that titles with paid-for in-game awards, such as loot boxes, are supposed to get banned. For overseeing and enforcing the ban, the Federal Trade Commission would be in charge. The FTC in-turn would hire state attorneys to prosecute companies violating the ban."No matter this business model's advantages to the tech industry, one thing is clear: there is no excuse for exploiting children through such practices", said Senator Hawley, adding to his point.
The Entertainment Software Association on Wednesday put out a statement rejecting Hawley's proposal. The president and CEO of the video game industry trade group, Stanley Pierre-Louis, pointed out that numerous countries like Ireland, Germany, Sweden, Denmark, Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom, determined that loot boxes do not classify as gambling.
The "Protecting Children from Abusive Games Act" would prohibit all games geared towards children, that implement a "pay to win" model where a player is progressing through the game by paying for it. The Senator also added that titles with paid-for in-game awards, such as loot boxes, are supposed to get banned. For overseeing and enforcing the ban, the Federal Trade Commission would be in charge. The FTC in-turn would hire state attorneys to prosecute companies violating the ban."No matter this business model's advantages to the tech industry, one thing is clear: there is no excuse for exploiting children through such practices", said Senator Hawley, adding to his point.
The Entertainment Software Association on Wednesday put out a statement rejecting Hawley's proposal. The president and CEO of the video game industry trade group, Stanley Pierre-Louis, pointed out that numerous countries like Ireland, Germany, Sweden, Denmark, Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom, determined that loot boxes do not classify as gambling.
71 Comments on US Senator Proposes a Ban on "Manipulative" Video Games
Children shouldn't learn from playing that the way forward is paying for shortcuts. Psychlogists would have a field day analyzing this.
Where do these kids get the money for microtransactions from? Thier parents allow access right? So is this protecting kids from predatory agents or is it protecting them from thier parents? I mean... its not the kids' money...
Loot boxes are gambling, should never have been allowed.
Amazon, Apple, Google app stores are full of free kids games that are candy crush knock offs or unlicensed cartoon games for tablets/phones. As I parent I don't know the first thing about these games other then you need to match three icons of the dog from my kids favorite TV show to win. Seems innocent enough, helps them kill some time so I can make lunch, then you get your Amazon, Google, Apple bill.