Taleroth: It is fun that it came out of California, isn't it? There's been some speculation that the attempt was made simply to try to accommodate the movie industry and give it a leg up over the game industry. I don't think the idea is entirely without merit.
If the movie industry was supporting this in any way (I don't believe they were), that was a huge mistake on their part. They also rely on a self-imposed ratings system and the ESRB system used by video games in the US is based on the same system the movies use. If this law made it through, they were essentially saying that the self-imposed ratings are not good enough and a precedent would be set for further legal restrictions placed on top of the ratings system; a precedent that could also be applied to movies.
EDIT - Actually, it looks like the movie industry was not behind this at all, the MPAA has praised this decision:
“The motion picture industry is no stranger to governments’ incursion on freedom of expression,” said MPAA’s chairman Chris Dodd, a U.S. senator from Connecticut for 30 years. “From the very inception of the movie industry, attempts to restrict speech have threatened the creativity of American movie-makers. We applaud the Supreme Court for recognizing the far-reaching First-Amendment implications posed by the California law.”
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