Fortune | FORTUNE 07月21日 20:55
First amendment vs. first-person shooter: Uvalde parents battle with ‘Call of Duty’ maker in court
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在德克萨斯州尤瓦尔迪罗布小学枪击案受害者家属提起的诉讼中,《使命召唤》的制造商 Activision 因其游戏内容被指控对枪击案负责。Activision 的律师辩称,根据第一修正案,电子游戏作为艺术作品受到保护,制造商不对玩家的行为负责。家属律师则反驳称,游戏通过营销武器给未成年人,超出了第一修正案的保护范围,并出示了游戏公司与枪支制造商之间的合同和通信记录,证明了游戏中的武器描绘与现实枪支的关联性。案件的焦点在于 Activision 的行为是否构成故意不当行为,而非仅仅是疏忽,这被法官认为是家属方需要克服的主要障碍。Meta Platforms 作为另一被告,也将面临类似的法律挑战。

🎮 Activision 的律师以第一修正案为由,主张法院应驳回针对《使命召唤》制造商的诉讼,理由是电子游戏作为艺术作品,创作者不对玩家的行为承担法律责任。此观点认为,尽管枪支暴力问题复杂,但本案证据并不支持制造商的责任。

⚖️ 原告家属的律师则认为,《使命召唤》通过将游戏作为平台营销武器给未成年人,已经超出了第一修正案的保护范畴。他们展示了 Activision 与枪支制造商之间的合同和通信,证明游戏中的武器描绘与现实枪支高度相似,且这种关联性有助于枪支制造商规避对未成年人营销的指控。

🎯 案件的关键在于原告方需要证明 Activision 的行为构成“故意不当行为”,而非仅仅是“疏忽”。法官指出,将 Activision 的行为描述为故意不当,是家属方在法律上需要克服的最大障碍,因为这直接关系到制造商是否应为潜在的、可预见的后果负责。

💡 案件还牵涉到 Meta Platforms,其被指控通过 Instagram 推广了枪击案少年枪手使用的产品。Meta 的律师将在后续的听证会上提出类似动议,显示出科技公司在枪支暴力事件中的潜在责任问题正受到广泛关注。

A lawyer for the maker of the video game Call of Duty argued Friday that a judge should dismiss a lawsuit brought by families of the victims of the Robb Elementary School attack in Uvalde, Texas, saying the contents of the war game are protected by the First Amendment.

The families sued Call of Duty maker Activision and Meta Platforms, which owns Instagram, saying that the companies bear responsibility for promoting products used by the teen gunman.

Three sets of parents who lost children in the shooting were in the audience at the Los Angeles hearing.

Activision lawyer Bethany Kristovich told Superior Court Judge William Highberger that the “First Amendment bars their claims, period full stop.”

“The issues of gun violence are incredibly difficult,” Kristovich said. “The evidence in this case is not.”

She argued that the case has little chance of prevailing if it continues, because courts have repeatedly held that “creators of artistic works, whether they be books, music, movies, TV or video games, cannot be held legally liable for the acts of their audience.”

The lawsuit, one of many involving Uvalde families, was filed last year on the second anniversary of one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history. The gunman killed 19 students and two teachers. Officers finally confronted and shot him after waiting more than an hour to enter the fourth-grade classroom.

Kimberly Rubio, whose 10-year-old daughter Lexi was killed in the shooting, was among the parents who came from Texas to Southern California, where Activision is based, for the hearing.

“We traveled all this way, so we need answers,” Rubio said outside the courthouse. “It’s our hope that the case will move forward so we can get those answers.”

An attorney for the families argued during the hearing that Call of Duty exceeds its First Amendment protections by moving into marketing.

“The basis of our complaint is not the existence of Call of Duty,” Katie Mesner-Hage told the judge. “It is using Call of Duty as a platform to market weapons to minors.”

The plaintiffs’ lawyers showed contracts and correspondence between executives at Activison and gunmakers whose products, they said, are clearly and exactly depicted in the game despite brand names not appearing.

Mesner-Hage said the documents show that they actually prefer being unlabeled because “it helps shield them from the implication that they are marketing guns to minors,” while knowing that players will still identify and seek out the weapons.

Kristovich said there is no evidence that the kind of product placement and marketing the plaintiffs are talking about happened in any of the editions of the game the shooter played.

The families have also filed a lawsuit against Daniel Defense, which manufactured the AR-style rifle used in the May 24, 2022, shooting. Koskoff argued that a replica of the rifle clearly appears on a splash page for Call of Duty.

Josh Koskoff, the families’ Connecticut-based lead attorney, also represented families of nine Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims in a lawsuit against gunmaker Remington and got a $73 million lawsuit settlement.

He invoked Sandy Hook several times in his arguments, saying the shooters there and in Uvalde shared the same gaming obsession.

Koskoff said the Uvalde shooter experienced “the absorption and the loss of self in Call of Duty.”

He said that immersion was so deep that the shooter searched online for how to obtain an armored suit that he didn’t know only exists in the game.

Video game is ‘in a class of its own,’ lawyer says

Koskoff played a clip from Call of Duty Modern Warfare, the game the shooter played, with a first-person shooter gunning down opponents.

The shots echoed loudly in the courtroom, and several people in the audience slowly shook their heads.

“Call of Duty is in a class of its own,” Koskoff said.

Kristovich argued for Activision that the game, despite its vast numbers of players, can be tied to only a few of the many U.S. mass shootings.

“The game is incredibly common. It appears in a scene on ‘The Office,’” she said. She added that it is ridiculous to assert that “this is such a horrible scourge that your honor has to essentially ban it through this lawsuit.”

Highberger told the lawyers he was not leaning in either direction before the hearing. He gave no time frame for when he will rule, but a quick decision is not expected.

The judge did tell the plaintiffs’ lawyers that their description of Activision’s actions seemed like deliberate malfeasance, where their lawsuit alleges negligence. He said that was the biggest hurdle they needed to clear.

“Their conduct created a risk of exactly what happened,” Mesner-Hage told him. “And we represent the people who are exactly the foreseeable victims of that conduct.”

Meta’s attorneys will make arguments on a similar motion next month.

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使命召唤 第一修正案 枪支暴力 电子游戏 法律责任
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