While it may seem petty to be so specific, yes, I do think that having a middleman step in to make the decision for the company would tip this over into being actual censorship. In that instance, Target Australia would not be the ones making the decision; it is being made for them by a third-party and imposed upon them by said party. As it is, they made the decision of their own volition, even if it was prompted by a ridiculous, overblown, and possibly faked or troll petition.Signa said:So let me spin this around on you. So in order to be true, actual censorship, the content of the "offensive" medium has to be altered to suit another party? Either that, or the Government has to be that other party? I'm just trying to make sure I follow you.shrekfan246 said:Well, first off, all instances of man-on-woman violence being removed from the game. Or removal of sexual encounters with prostitutes. More broadly, the removal of weapons or alteration of script due to swears. Any actual tangible change to the game's content caused directly by the complaints of an outside source is at least far more worthy of being called "censorship" than this. Though by the technical meaning of the word even all of that hardly applies if it's a change being actively made by the developer themselves. Trivializing the meaning of the term with the "Self-censorship is still censorship!" argument does nothing to help us if you ask me.
More specifically, I should think I've already made this obvious but I would consider it to be censorship if the governing body of Australia had seen this and stepped in to decide "Oh hey, no, you guys can't sell Grand Theft Auto anymore." Or if they had initially declined to classify Grand Theft Auto in the first place, thus preventing it from being sold at all within the country.
If that's the case, would it still be censorship if this watchdog group asked the government to make Target pull the game instead? It still would be the same people making the same decisions, but there would be a middleman making the calls now.
To clarify, it diminishes the meaning of the term "censorship", which harms actual cases of censorship in the world. Think of it as a "Boy Who Cried Wolf" sort of thing.I also wanted to ask about this line. I feel like you said it because it felt right, but parsing it out, I can't make sense of it. What would be "helping us" and how does defining this as censorship hurt us? The game has already been banned, and that group is moving on to do more damage.Trivializing the meaning of the term with the "Self-censorship is still censorship!" argument does nothing to help us if you ask me.
Also, there's still a difference between a retailer refusing to stock a game and said game being banned from sale. Target and K-Mart are still capable of selling Grand Theft Auto V, they're simply choosing not to. In cases of censorship, that choice would not be present.
EDIT: Or to use your animal analogy, think of it like being shown a golden retriever and a fox, and the person showing you the two is trying to tell you they're both dogs. On a technicality they're very similar, but it's not the same thing.