A Fox affiliate in Houston has a short video segment up about the kid who was arrested for creating a Counter Strike map of his school. The video even shows some sections of the map he created, and it looks like really good work.
The friend’s mother is a particularly disturbing figure, she says “to see our own school on there, it just isn’t… isn’t right.” On there? Give me a break. And cut the melodrama. The first thing any gaming enthusiast does when they get their hands on a map editor is to recreate a familiar location. I did it, my friends have done it, and several companies won’t hire level designers who haven’t done that. This is anything but cause for alarm.
In fact, this is easily one of the most frustrating things an FPS shooter could watch happen. It’s just downright insane. I see two sides to this issue… One side is the legal perspective. Clearly, he did absolutely nothing illegal or wrong. He never made any threats to anybody or to the school. As far as has been reported, he exhibited no suspicious or menacing behavior.
On the other side of things, I see a vast gap in understanding which seems somewhat generational. To those of us who grew up playing video games, Counter Strike and games like it aren’t “simulations.” Contrary to bat-shit-crazy lawyer Jack Thompson’s claims, kids don’t “train” on these games nor do they play them out of any fantasy of causing harm to others.
It’s more like a sport. Think of it like paintball. Are kids who play paintball more likely to go on murderous rampages? I doubt it. Just like in paintball, multiplayer games like Counter Strike are essentially elaborate, fast-paced versions of “tag.” Heck, they bear such little resemblence to real armed combat it’s laughable when Thompson calls them “simulators.” I have a feeling that no school shootings have ever included “bunny hopping” or having a teammate kneel down so that the shooter could jump on his back and shoot over an object. What I’m saying is, circle-strafing whiled typing “PWNED!” probably isn’t the sort of skill useful to a murderous maniac.
You might think this disconnect is surprising, considering that the perpetrator of the violence at Virginia Tech never played video games at all. In my opinion, that fact alone should have singled him out as a target of scrutiny. What college male doesn’t play either Halo, Counter Strike, or World of Warcraft? Unfortunately, you have nutballs like Jack Thompson out there trying to get on TV and rally against… something. So they choose an easy target… one that most parents simply don’t understand.
I hope this kid is permitted to return to school and receives one heck of an apology from the school, police, and the friends’ parents who “turned him in.” And they better make it good, lest their asses be sued off.
It seems the whole “But… but… China!” talking point used by those opposing efforts to curb climate-changing emissions in the US isn’t holding so much water these days.
Check out Keith’s latest look back on the years since “Mission Accomplished” was declared in Iraq.
Meanwhile, despite years of “progress” and being just about to “turn a corner,” it looks like the President is set to veto the bill passed by the House and the Senate to support our troops with funding and a plan for phased redeployment and withdrawal. No wonder election coverage has started so ridiculously early… the country has become desperate to get rid of this guy.
Since Adobe has been slacking and not supporting x64 versions of Vista or Windows Desktop Search, it’s very nice to see FoxIt once again stepping up and getting things done.
I’m very pleased to share that FoxIt (creators of the excellent FoxIt PDF Reader) have released version 1.0 of their PDF IFilter, including both 32-bit and 64-bit versions. They also helped develop a PDF previewer for Outlook 2007. Go FoxIt!
A student has been arrested for “suspected terrorist activity” after reportedly creating a 3D environment for a game based on the layout of his school.
I once did the same thing.
Well, I never actually finished it. But it was a school project. In 10th grade or so, I used a Half-Life map editor to build a 3D recreation of an Egyptian pyramid for part of a presentation in History class. The next year, I decided to take on a 3D recreation of the school. I don’t even remember if that was Half-Life or Unreal-engine based, but it was one of them. I created textures from photographs of walls and floors, and built some 3D models for parts of the school.
It was part of an indepedent-study sort of program I was in at the Albany Academy, where computer-savvy students would take on personal projects and share resources. My small computer business even donated computer systems to the program (including a massively powerful 700mhz Athlon machine, the first machine in the program that ran Windows, and Linux - instead of FreeBSD). At any rate, the act certainly wasn’t “terrorism,” it was even sanctioned by the faculty member who led the independent-study program.
Unless the student they arrested has a history of violence, threatening behavior, or some serious psychological problems… I couldn’t even imagine the simple creation of a custom video game map to be cause for concern. Cause for arrest is just mind bogglingly absurd, when I consider that I’d once persued the same task.
The original story suggests that this is a bigger problem because the kid is asian. Exactly which century is this again?
Apparently he’s been expelled from school and won’t be allowed to graduate, even though he’s been arrested without being charged of any crime. That’s illegal, right? Nope, apparently he’s a terrorist. Good to see the Patriot Act is being put to good use.
In an act of rarely seen internet unity, they cried “09-f9-11-02-9d-74-e3-5b-d8-41-56-c5-63-56-88-c0″.
What does it mean? Those numbers stand for freedom.
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Hi. I'm Brandon. I'm a geek, and I work on Search technology for Windows at Microsoft. This is my blog.
The views expressed within my blog are my own - and are not in any way indicative of those of the company I work for, Microsoft, or it's employees. No warranties or other guarantees will be offered as to the quality of the opinions or anything else offered here.