Resist Further Censorship of Videogames

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) plans to influence governments to censor even more content in videogames under the guise of removing 'violations of human rights and the Geneva Convention'. They class the NPCs (non-playable characters) of videogames as persons and subject to the protections set down in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Geneva Convention. If this comes to pass, videogames as we know them may very well cease to exist. No more Mortal Kombat 'Fatalities', no more killing unarmed or maimed civilian or even enemy NPCs, no more finishing-move executions in FPS. The over-regulation of our lives will soon come to a head, and this is where it will start. If you want to keep games free from unnecessary interference, especially by organisations with too much power and little understanding of the things they try to affect, sign this petition, I urge you. If you'd like to read a brief news article about the issue, the link is below.

http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/technology/six-hundred-million-gamers-could-be-war-criminals-red-cross-says/story-fn7cejhd-1226216184190

We the undersigned, hereby submit this petition against the ICRCs intention to influence laws internationally, designed to limit the content of video games, specifically content that the ICRC considers as 'violations' of International Humanitarian Law. Although we recognise and support the need for awareness of human rights and the nature of actions constituting violations of those rights and of the rules of war, we do not recognise the fictional computer generated depiction or actuation of, what would in the real world, be 'violations' of human rights or the rules of war as being subject to either the Universal Declaration of Human Rights or the Geneva Convention, as they are wholly virtual and have no basis outside of a computer generated environment.

A close concensus between three major dictionaries (Oxford English Dictionary, Webster's and Dr Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language) defines a 'being' as an entity, as something with in a state of corporeal existence. Both the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Geneva Convention specifically employ the phraseology of 'human being' and 'person' to define beings under the protections of these treaties and agreements, neither of which could either on a biological , philosophical, theological or legal level be used as a to describe virtual representations of humans, as they are no more a being than a character in a book or a drawing of a person. The nature of NPCs (Non-Playable Characters) is that they are not persons, being neither corporeal nor sentient, but are sophisticated lines of compiled computer code designed to give the appearance of persons and exhibit behaviour determined by the game engines AI according to the game physics, within the virtual environment of the game.

 

If fictional depictions of 'violations' of human rights or the Geneva Convention (either virtual, or even literary) were to be prohibited via the ICRC influencing governments to legislate against such scenarios, the producers, directors and actors of movies would then also be guilty of 'committing war crimes' or 'violating human rights', despite the unreality of the situation. By extrapolation, even fictional writers would be guilty by virtue of the fact that the 'violation' would not have taken place without their penning it.

We charge the ICRC that it has employed wholly fallacious reasoning, both in it's classification of 'virtual violations' (as the ICRC are not technically equipped to define contemporary understandings of what constitutes personhood), and despite whatever powers granted to the ICRC by the Geneva Convention, the organisation does not have the justification or authority to influence elements of human society outside of it's sphere of jurisdiction. Furthermore, we contend that it is not the function of the ICRC to alter the boundaries of it's own role autocratically, or to arbitrarily take it upon themselves to influence governments to legislate against things which cannot be understood bureacratically, but only philosophically.

 

That the ICRC has taken the view that it has is greatly alarming, and only serves to provide further evidence of the dangers of bureacracies with excesses of power, organisations that attempt to use their powers to influence things for which they have the power but not the right to interfere with, and the over-legislation of society. As such, we will hereby resist with any peaceful method this intrusion into our virtual realms.

We thank you for reading our petition and hope that our words have impacted you enough to cause you to reexamine your reasoning.

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