<![CDATA[Kotaku: hillary clinton]]> http://tags.kotaku.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/kotaku.com.png <![CDATA[Kotaku: hillary clinton]]> http://kotaku.com/tag/hillaryclinton http://kotaku.com/tag/hillaryclinton <![CDATA[Hillary's '3 AM Call of Duty: Mission Bosnia']]> With Hillary Clinton's admission that she 'misspoke' about her experiences in Bosnia with snipers, you knew the game parody version wouldn't be far behind. And it wasn't — Bill Maher presents Hillary Clinton's 3 A.M. Call of Duty: Mission Bosnia. It's slightly funnier than the plethora of terrible flash games that have sprung up during these campaigns. [via GamePolitics]

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<![CDATA[Hillary Clinton is Polling About Video Games]]> Hillary Clinton wants you! (to tell her your taste in gaming). In what is surely a politician's way of milking you for hipster intel, Hillary Clinton is polling not just your level of liberal or conservative, or just how big of an issue children wearing bike helmets in Iraq is to you. She wants to know what you've been playing. In her most recent online poll, among the more standard questions you'd expect to see, she asks:

Which of the following have you visited or played online?

Options: Sim City, Second Life, Sims, None of the above, Other, Don't know

Wow, not too many options there. My slightly cynical side wonders if participants will merely be fulfilling a watered-down stat. My slightly more cynical side wonders if it's a bit hypocritical for Clinton to be polling on games when she wouldn't respond to a gaming poll in the recent past. And then my most cynical side wonders why the hell Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina decide the fate of us all.

Survey Questions from Hillary Clinton's Web Polling [via gamingtoday]

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<![CDATA[Grand Theft Hillary]]> New York political leaders may not be thrilled with the NYC-like setting of Liberty City for Grand Theft Auto IV, but something tells me that Senator Clinton is going to like this Photoshop job even less. Take a horribly unflattering pic of Mrs. Clinton and slap it on GTA IV's lead and you've got the above. I don't know why it's so funny. But it is.

From FreshJulius and our Gizmodo brothers.

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<![CDATA[Lieberman Joins Clinton in Line For Gaming Donations]]> Back in August, 2005 I broke the story that ESA president Doug Lowenstein and Steve Schnur, Worldwide Executive of Music for Electronic Arts were co-hosting an intimate $1,000-a-plate affair to raise money for the Friends of Hillary Clinton.

The breakfast, set at a posh D.C. hotel, happened just two months to the day after Clinton took the video game industry to task for "stealing the innocence of our children" and called for a federal investigation into the discovery of hidden sex in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.

Now it looks like her pal Joe Lieberman, a fellow video game naysayer, has also been caught with his hand in the video game till.

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, Lieberman received about $73,000 from a variety of entertainment industry sources over the past two years, including Microsoft and Sony.

Asked why he accepted their money, Lieberman first joked, "I really don't get anything [contributions] from that industry."

And, he added, taking the donations "obviously doesn't affect my behavior, and the system allows for anyone who wants to see what I get to view all the donations."

Oh... that money!

Lieberman Defends Video-Game Money [Hartford Courant]

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<![CDATA[Penn. Senator Rick Santorum Goes to the Mat Against Violent Video Games]]>

In a surprising show of hypocrisy in the government, Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum's new campaign ad features the upstanding politico in the wrestling ring talking about all his various partnerships with various government bigwigs. He makes reference to his work with Hillary Clinton's Anti Violent Video Game initiative, yet ten seconds later he's elbowing some poor wrestler guy right in the face.

Perhaps no one has explained to Mr. Santorum that in some circles, a sharp elbow to the face could be misconstrued as violent. Check out the video on the Senator's website, cleverly titled Wrestling.


I'm Rick Santorum, and I Approved Elbowing this Guy in the Face During My Anti-Video Game Violence Commercial
[GamePolitics]

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<![CDATA[Breaking: FTC Rules on Hot Coffee]]> This morning the Federal Trade Commission found that Take-Two Interactive was deceptive in the way it marketed Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas but did not fine the company or order that they return any of their profits from the game, the commission announced today.

"According to the FTC, the companies, in advertising the Entertainment Software Rating Board ("ESRB") rating for the game, did not tell consumers that the game discs contained potentially viewable nude female characters and a potentially playable sex mini-game. Although San Andreas players could not access or view this sexual content during normal game play, sophisticated players posted a program on the Internet, dubbed "Hot Coffee," that revealed this content on the PC version of the game," FTC officials said.

While the company was not fined, they have been placed on notice that if they again violate the ratings, they will be subject to a civil fine of up to $11,000 per a violation.

Calls into Take-Two Interactive, the Entertainment Software Association and Senator Hillary Clinton had not been returned as of press time.

Today's findings come after a nearly year-long investigation into the publisher, developer Rockstar Games and the infamous Hot Coffee content found in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.

Hot Coffee, a bit of hidden sex found behind the apartment doors of the game, was discovered last July after a modder released a hack for the game that unlocked the previously hidden content.

At the time Rockstar first denied the claim that the content was in the game and then later said it was a piece of unused programming left on the disc, but not meant to be seen or played.

On July 20, the Entertainment Software Rating Board rescinded the game's rating and asked retailers to stop selling the game.

Take-Two agreed to a recall and rereleased the game with the content removed. According to the FTC, Take-Two incurred $24.5 million in losses associated with the GTA recall.

The recall came a week after Sen Hillary Clinton called for the FTC to investigate Take-Two interactive for deceptive marketing practices. That was followed by a similar request by the House of Representatives, which passed a resolution asking for an investigation.

While neither Clinton nor the House have the force of law to require the FTC to launch the investigation, it did certainly help the commission decide to look into Hot Coffee.

When I spoke with FTC spokeswoman Claudia Bourne Farrell last year she told me that the investigation would only be made public if enforcement action were taken. She added that in general, if the FTC were to find wrongdoings in an investigation, they have the ability to require a defendant to "give up their ill-gotten gains."

The FTC found that Take-Two and Rocksta Games violated the FTC Act by "representing that San Andreas had been rated "Mature" and assigned certain content descriptors by the ESRB, but failing to disclose to consumers that the game discs contained unused, but potentially viewable, nude female images and disabled, but potentially playable, software code for a sexually explicit mini-game that the ESRB had not rated."

Instead of fining the company, the FTC proposed a concenst agreement that requires the company to disclose all hidden content on their packaging that might be relavent to the rating, unless it was disclosed to the ESRB during the rating process. They also are requiring the comapany to develope a system to ensure that all content in a game is considered and reviewed while preparing to submit a game to the ESB.

Take-Two agreed to the proposal and the commission voted 5 to zero to accept it.

While Take-Two got off with a slap on the wrist, the greater issue at stake here is Clinton's claim that the ESRB's rating system is currently ineffectual at enforcement. Clinton would rather have a government run rating system than one run by the industry.

As this unfolds, nearly a year after Hot Coffee scalded the industry, congressional hearings are gearing up to examine both the impact gaming has on childen and the effectiveness of the ratings board. Coincidentally, just hours before the FTC announcement, Clinton put out her "Media Guide for Parents." The guide, she says, is to help parents make sure that when their children are on the Internet, playing video games or watching TV, it's safe and age-appropriate."

I've said it before and I'll say it again, this is video games own Seduction of the Innocents. Welcome to the Fourties

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