My boss and I got into an interesting debate stemming from my desire for a personal holodeck (a holodeck replicates tangible objects, meaning you cannot tell the difference between reality and generated matter inside the deck). Who wouldn't enjoy going into a holodeck to simulate their favorite action game? I'd take my chainsaw and head straight after some zombies, and possibly follow-up by blasting away a Big Daddy in Rapture.
But what happens when someone wants to play some Grand Theft Auto? When your simulation replicates reality to a point where it is indiscernable? If you enter your virtual world and murder someone, or commit some other criminal act - and I'm sure you can think of a few without naming them explicitly - should it be punishable?
If every holodeck session is recorded, and you have a history of participating in violent or deadly activities, should it be submissable as evidence against the accused in a real court (mental health evidence)? Should you be criminally liable for actions committed in the holodeck?
I've played my share of graphic titles, and love 'em, but it really got me questioning my premises when the delivery method shifted from television to a more realistic simulation.
Cheers,
Boz
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