Categories
Games General

Chicago for Child’s Play Charitable and Fun

A few days ago I attended Chicago for Child’s Play, sponsored by Dawdle.com and Midway Games. If you’re not familiar with Child’s Play, it describes itself as a game industry charity dedicated to improving the lives of children with toys and games in their network of over 40 hospitals worldwide.

There was an MK vs DC tournament, and if you were eliminated, you could buy back in for a donation amount that doubled each round. It started with only 18 people and doubled in size before Round 1 finished. Considering I haven’t played a Mortal Kombat game in years, I think I put in a respectable showing as Batman, even though I was eliminated three different times and only won once. The ultimate winner of the tournament received a PSP.

One attendee uploaded pictures for the event at Flickr.

Besides the tournament, there was an auction for games. I won three DS games, and there were more than a number of Xbox 360 and PS3 titles that went home with some healthy bidders. The mantra that night was “For the kids!”

Game-loving Chicagoans had fun and raised money for a good cause. For the kids, FTW!

Categories
General

Chicago for Child’s Play Charity

I thought I would pass this information along since it doesn’t seem like most people know about it.

From http://www.childsplaycharity.org/events.php:

December 9th 2008

Chicago, IL. (Plan B Chicago, 1635 N. Milwaukee Avenue, Chicago, IL 60647) Dawdle.com and Midway Games are sponsoring the first-ever Child’s Play fundraiser in Chicago! Join us for gaming, booze, and prizes! We’ll have a gaming contest (game TBA) and some other special items. Totally inspired by Funde Razor, we’re doing our part to raise the spirits of some very deserving kids.

To learn more, please go to http://www.dawdle.com/childsplay. To purchase your ticket, please visit to http://childsplay.eventbrite.com/

I’ll be attending, and so should you! Check http://www.childsplaycharity.org/events.php for Child’s Play events in your area.

Categories
General

Happy Thanksgiving!

Just like last year, I want to take this opportunity to be thankful.

These days it is easy to focus on the negative. The bad news about the economy is constant, hate and violence seems to be erupting all over the world, and there are plenty of fingers pointing blame in every direction.

So it is good to take a step back and think about what’s good in your life. I’m thankful for the ability to focus on the positive. I have a warm home, great friends, two fantastic cats, and opportunities just waiting to be taken advantage of. I’m thankful for my readers, the people who have played my games and given me feedback, and the people who have made the games that I play.

To everyone who has made an impact on my life, you are my teachers, and I thank you for the opportunities to learn from you.

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!

Categories
Geek / Technical General

Happy Birthday, Tim Schafer!

Today is my birthday, and according to Wikipedia, besides sharing it with George Bernard Shaw, Mick Jagger, Carl Jung, Sandra Bullock, Aldous Huxley, Stanley Kubrick, and Kevin Spacey, I share it with Tim Schafer. Seems like I’ve got great company.

Happy birthday! I’m going to have some cake and celebrate with friends!

Categories
General

Back from SIC 2008

I’m back from the Software Industry Conference. I wish I had more time to explore Boston, but the conference was great! I met a lot of cool people, saw a few good presentations, and got great advice whether solicited or not.

And yes, Boston had orange juice.

I’ve already taken actions to improve my business since coming back on Sunday. I signed up for AdWords, and I’ve made some notes on improving my currently stagnating business plan. Heck, I’ve also cleared off part of my desk in my office so I can actually sit at it.

I hope to see you at SIC next year!

[tags] sic, software industry conference, shareware professionals, business, indie [/tags]

Categories
Game Development Games General Marketing/Business Politics/Government

Corporations and Copyright

A few weeks back, Cliffski wrote about how some people complain about corporations and copyright as if they are all part of one big organization out to screw you over. He reminds you that not all corporations are huge, multi-billion dollar enterprises such as EA, British Airways, or Microsoft. Some corporations are as small as the local bakery or in the case of Positech Games and GBGames, one person in a spare room at home.

Cliffski doesn’t want you to paint all copyright owners and corporations with the same broad brush. Just because some companies are evil, it doesn’t mean that all of them are. Still, I wish he would be more consistent with his arguments. If you don’t argue that all copyright violators are the scum of the earth….well, you’re either with us or against us, it seems. I think the broad paint stroke shouldn’t be OK on either canvas, but that just makes me a terrorist pirate sympathizer to some people.

Still, I agree with Cliffski’s main point, that copyright isn’t evil, and corporations aren’t either. But when organizations such as the RIAA, the MPAA, and the BSA, musicians such as Madonna and Metallica, and companies such as Wal-mart, Best Buy, and Target use copyright law to abuse their customers and fans, what is a regular person supposed to think?

Copyright is a confusing topic for people who are familiar with it, so of course the lay person won’t know much about it. Copyright, trademark, and patent laws are usually thrown together as “intellectual property”, and the three are always being confused for each other. How many times have you heard someone say, “Oh, that’s a great name for a band! You should copyright it!” or “You write great poetry! You should patent it!”? How often were you the person saying such statements? By the way, I wrote an article on copyright law that should give you a better understanding than most people seem to have. You can find it at What an Indie Needs to Know About Copyright.

I don’t know how UK copyright law differs from US copyright law, but the purpose of copyright here isn’t to provide an incentive for the creator. The purpose is to promote the sciences and useful arts. Providing incentive is the means to that end. You’ll find people who supposedly support copyright who argue that it is there solely to protect the works of authors so they can make money, even though it isn’t the case at all. So there is confusion on all sides, it seems.

If you were to write a poem on a napkin, you would own the copyright to that poem. Many people are surprised that it is so simple to own a copyright. You just create something! Bam! It’s yours! Perhaps because most people don’t think about copyright in general, it never occurs to them that they can own the copyright to something and NOT make money from it. When most people think of copyrights, they think of best-selling books or blockbuster movies or hit songs. They don’t think about the struggling author or the garage band or the amateur film director with maxed out credit cards. They don’t think about the personal blog or a custom song for a lover or a love note on a windshield. Even though they might not have a profit motive, these works can be protected by copyright as well.

Years ago, Jay Barnson wrote about his personal experience with his pirate story. He worked at a now-closed game development company which created some popular games. While he estimated that the infringement rate was around 30%, which I’m sure seemed high at the time, these days we’re seeing companies reporting that more people will play games illegally than purchase a legal copy. Reflexive estimated over 90%, and even Linux Game Publishing recently announced its discovery that more people made support requests for an illegal copy than for a legal copy.

Now, only major companies are playing with the numbers to make you think that each infringement represents a lost sale. Most people know that while infringement might be high and should ideally be nonexistent, it isn’t as if 100% of the illegal copies would be sales if the illegal option didn’t exist. Still, major corporations actually try to convince you that it is true.

Is it any wonder that most people don’t respect corporations in general? The major corporations act as representatives for all corporations, and people generally don’t like being accused of crimes before they’ve committed them. And if they don’t respect the corporations, why would they treat the copyrights these corporations wield any better, especially when they don’t understand what the heck copyright is in the first place?

Is copyright infringement a problem for corporations, including the indies? I would say so. While it isn’t 1-to-1, Reflexive’s experience indicates that taking measures to prevent illegal copies results in increased sales. And I think from that same experience, we can see that not all copyright infringement comes from freeloaders who will do anything to screw hardworking people over.

The economist from Freakonomics argues that everything comes down to incentives. If you accept this idea, then of course there is an incentive for people to get their games for free rather than pay for them. If it isn’t too much effort, and there isn’t a risk of getting caught or of dealing with repercussions, then a lot of people will probably do it, too. What’s strange to me is that publishers will make the legal option less and less appealing by piling on draconian copy protection and all sorts of features that their customers don’t want. Doesn’t such a practice give people an even greater incentive to get the illegal version that doesn’t have all of the junk associated with it?

I’m afraid that major corporations have conditioned people to expect such treatment as normal. Politicians want your computer to blow up if it has allegedly infringement material on it…even though copyright law is so complicated that it is very possible that the average computer owner won’t know what constitutes infringement. Laws are passed making it illegal for you to do things that were perfectly legal for you to do before, all because the MPAA, RIAA, and BSA don’t want you to be able to do them so they can charge for the privilege. After all of this, is it any wonder that people complain about “the corporations” and copyright?

Yeah, it’s a problem that people don’t think of the mom & pop store down the street as a corporation even though it is one, and yeah, it is a problem that people don’t understand copyright and how it works, but let’s be serious. If you think that they reached their conclusions, faulty or no, outside of the experience they have from major corporations, you’re deluding yourself.

As an indie, I know I’m going to have to deal with my customers’ perception, regardless if they are the right ones. I have to build my own reputation and hope that a company such as EA or Valve or Positech doesn’t do something stupid to reflect badly on the industry as a whole. Sony’s rootkit fiasco probably put people off buying music CDs, at least those from Sony, and even if it didn’t, I’m sure it didn’t help make the RIAA look better. It is sad when The Pirate Bay provides a better value than the legally purchased product, and the more that happens, the less likely someone will have an incentive to buy, especially from the one-person corporation with no legal department to provide disincentive.

[tags] indie, piracy, business, copyright [/tags]

Categories
General

It Sure Is Quiet Around Here

I wish I could say I was too busy working on my projects to blog, but I haven’t been. It’s been crunch at the day job, and I’ve been spending any other time on higher priority things. Things are quieting down, so I should be back to a regular posting schedule soon.

I know you were worried.

Categories
General

Oh, I Felt an Earthquake This Morning…

I couldn’t sleep last night, so while I was working on fixing a dependency issue with Killer Kittens (by the way, I would still like some more beta testers!), I noticed that the monitor on my desk started to shake.

I thought that maybe it was my heart beat. I’ve had moments where my heart beat made my entire body move, and I noticed that my chair seemed to be creaking with my weight as well. But then I felt like the entire building was moving. Was there some kind of resonance?

Later on, I saw someone’s status update on Facebook which mentioned sleeping through an earthquake. I have some friends in California, so I didn’t think anything of it, except this update was from someone who should still be in Chicago.

Then I saw a post on the blog of Pretty Good Solitaire‘s Tom Warfield called Earthquake. He lives in Illinois, but he is much farther south and closer to the source. He also posted a follow up since there was an aftershock, but I did not notice that one here.

It was a 5.2 magnitude earthquake, and I didn’t even realize what it was all the way back here in Chicago!

I guess there is nothing like an Illinois earthquake to get you pumped for the weekend, huh?

Categories
General

Illinois Taxpayers, Government Programs Pay for Unconstitutional Video Game Law

Last week I learned from GamePolitics.com that the Illinois Governor has raided welfare funds to help pay for the ESA’s legal fees after his video game legislation was ruled unconstitutional. I’ve written previously about this law, and I was unsurprised to find that this law was merely pandering to fear.

I was also unsurprised, as Blagojevich should have been, that the law was deemed unconstitutional. I mean, every other state that passed similar laws saw them meet the same fate.

According to Ars Technica’s take on this situation:

It would be easier to defend the state’s efforts at fighting for the law if there weren’t so many strong precedents: by the time Illinois got around to writing its gaming law, Missouri, Indiana, and Washington had already tried to pass similar laws, only to fail on constitutional grounds. There was very little evidence that the law had any chance of succeeding in Illinois, but Gov. Blagojevich saw the law as a politically safe move.

Illinois owed about $1 million in legal fees. At the time, we already knew Illinois taxpayers would be the ones to take the punishment, but now we find that multiple departments had their budgets pillaged.

Let’s see if we can put these facts together:

  • Illinois has been having budget problems in general.
  • Blago went ahead with a bill that was just like unconstitutional laws from other states.
  • Now the legal fees need to be paid by grabbing money from departments that are already cash-strapped.

A different Ars Technica article has more details about the budget moves:

Some of the areas money was taken from included the public health department, the state’s welfare agency and even the economic development department.

A state representative who attended recent hearings on the issue said that Gov. Blagojevich’s staff simply spread the legal bills around by sticking them to agencies which had funds left in their budgets—even if the agencies had nothing to do with the issue or the litigation.

Is there a reason why this bit of news ends up in the Quad Cities Online but not in the Chicago Sun-Times or the Chicago Tribune? $1,000,000 is a lot of money for Illinois taxpayers to lose, especially when it didn’t have to.

[tags] illinois, government, taxes, video games, constitutionality [/tags]

Categories
General

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Or if you are alone today, Happy Ferris Wheel Day!

Just some interesting and related links: