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VR Devs Pull Support For Oculus Rift Until Palmer Luckey Steps Down (vice.com) 657

After it was revealed that Oculus founder Palmer Luckey backed a pro-Trump political organization called Nimble America that is dedicated to "shitposting" and spreading inflammatory memes about Hillary Clinton, several developers of the Oculus Rift virtual-reality headset have announced that they will stop supporting the headset until its founder steps down. One of the biggest developers for Oculus Rift, Insomniac Games, told Motherboard, "Insomniac Games condemns all forms of hate speech. While everyone has a right to express his or her political opinion, the behavior and sentiments reported do not reflect the values of our company. We are also confident that his behavior and sentiment does not reflect the values of the many Oculus employees we work with on a daily basis." Fez and Superhypercube developer Polytron also said in a statement, "In a political climate as fragile and horrifying as this one, we cannot tacitly endorse these actions by supporting Luckey or his platform." Motherboard reports: Motherboard has reached out to several other, more well-known VR developers who work with Oculus including Fantastic Contraption makers Northway Games and Job Simulator makers Owlchemy Labs. Northway Games couldn't be reached immediately for comment but tweeted the following: "What. The. Fuck. [accompanied with a link to the news via Kotaku]" and "Definitely using every fibre of my 'professionalism' to not tweet some tweets right now." Owlchemy Labs, which is currently developing for Job Simulator for the Oculus Touch controls, declined to comment either way. E McNeill, who has developed a couple of games for Oculus Rift and GearVR, suggested that like-minded VR developers raise money for Hillary Clinton's campaign to counter the money Luckey has raised for Trump. [E McNeill tweeted: "Idle Q: Would any Oculus devs join me in a donation drive for HIllary? We could aim to beat Nimble America's $11k. I'd start with $1k myself."] "This backlash is nonsense," said James Green, co-founder of VR developer Carbon Games. "I absolutely support him doing whatever he wants politically if it's legal. To take any other position is against American values."
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VR Devs Pull Support For Oculus Rift Until Palmer Luckey Steps Down

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  • So basically... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:23PM (#52950181)

    So basically these developers are intolerant of any type of political message other than their own.

    • Re:So basically... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:30PM (#52950211)

      The "political message" was spamming social media via bots to upload and upvote images. It's not the contents so much as the delivery method that's a proble.m

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        And liberal groups are not attacking Trump with similar tactics?

        • Re:So basically... (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:35PM (#52950245)

          Sure they are, but since Soros is paying for that it's OK.

        • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:47PM (#52950323)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • And liberal groups are not attacking Trump with similar tactics?

            That's too much like work, its far easier to just replay everything he actually says. It goes viral on its own...

            And then replay the videos of everything he denies ever saying. (Roll 212 !)

            [I don't know why anyone would want a President that doesn't understand how video recorders/tape works.]

          • Like the week-long "scandal" over a star-shape in a Trump tweet, the time he "didn't" disavow David Duke, or the two times he "called for Hillary to be assassinated?" Please, I'd love to see the videos of these things that never happened.

      • Re:So basically... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by KiloByte ( 825081 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:46PM (#52950313)

        Like, say, "Correct the Record" which shitposts pro-Hillary?

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          Trump changes position more often than I change my shirt [nbcnews.com]. And I never let my shirt get the stink on. He will frequently lie about his previous positions, e.g his recent claim that he was against the Iraq war is a lie [cnn.com]. "Correct the Record" refers to exactly that. When Trump lies, call it out it immediately. Shitposting is lying to disrupt the discourse. Correcting the record, is the exact opposite.

          I'm not an American, so I won't be voting for either, but it does seem that (a) most of the stories about Hil

      • Both sides do it. So what's your point?
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Pretty much the case. They're protesting their distaste of perceived intolerance with flat out, unabashed intolerance.

    • Re:So basically... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:31PM (#52950221)
      Yes, I made a note of these devs and I will never buy one of their products.
      • Re:So basically... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by HiThere ( 15173 ) <[ten.knilhtrae] [ta] [nsxihselrahc]> on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:42PM (#52950289)

        That's fair. And it's also fair for the devs to refuse to work with Occulus...unless they have a contract that says otherwise. If they do, they'd be doing the same kind of unethical behavior that Trump has often been charged with.

        • Re:So basically... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:52PM (#52950377)
          There's unethical behavior all over the world, all the time. They are intentionally picking and choosing a political position. That is, as you say, their right to do so. But then they shouldn't complain when they exclude themselves from roughly half the market. Picking and choosing has a down-side too.
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            The old "why don't you care about children starving in Africa!" argument. When your doctor treats you for an in-growling toe nail, do you berate him for not concentrating his resources on cancer patients who are in even greater need?

            Here is something they can do something effective about immediately.

      • Yes, I made a note of these devs and I will never buy one of their products.

        Big deal, I'm never using a VR product of any kind. In fact, I'm thinking about poking one of my eyes out.

    • by sabri ( 584428 )

      So basically these developers are intolerant of any type of political message other than their own.

      This. Exactly this.

      Trump might be an idiotic bigot, and Hillary might be a liar and crook, but that does not mean anyone is entitled to their own opinion.

      And sure, it is your right to not to business with someone you don't agree with, but that makes you an even bigger idiot because that's not how a society will function. It's more Kindergarten behavior.

    • So basically these developers are intolerant of any type of political message other than their own.

      Unlike the people who have vowed to boycott the NFL because of something a backup quarterback did.

    • Those devs do not want to be associated with shit-posting hate speech or Trump for that matter.
      Seems fair to me the market will have a field day with Palmer Luckey.

      Of world population (market), how many % endorses Trump? Less than 1% I'd say. He is viewed as a scary incoherent constantly lying madman with completely crazy ideas in all places I can think of... except USA.
    • That's their right. Luckey's right is to speak against Hillary, VR devs' right is to be intolerant to Luckey, a consumer's right is to boycott those VR devs because of their siding with Hillary and so on.

      As long as we all have those rights and are exercising them legally it works itself out. It's sad that so much hate is going on but you can't blame Trump or Hillary for that -- it's the state of the world at the moment that created the conditions for it. In a wiser world such conditions would be prevented b

      • by Etcetera ( 14711 )

        That's their right. Luckey's right is to speak against Hillary, VR devs' right is to be intolerant to Luckey, a consumer's right is to boycott those VR devs because of their siding with Hillary and so on.

        As long as we all have those rights and are exercising them legally it works itself out. It's sad that so much hate is going on but you can't blame Trump or Hillary for that -- it's the state of the world at the moment that created the conditions for it. In a wiser world such conditions would be prevented before Trump or Hillary would rise to prominence, but it is what it is.

        While this is absolutely true, it doesn't mean it's good -- in the long term -- for American culture to slide into "I'll boycott anyone I disagree with about anything" mentality, because it reduces social cohesion and increases social friction.

        As a libertarianish conservative, I agree 100% with people's free speech, and free speech about others free speech, and economic boycotts about others' free speech. I still lament that it has come to this and hope this age passes quickly. There's a resonant effect tha

    • Re:So basically... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @07:26PM (#52950565) Homepage Journal

      So basically these developers are intolerant of any type of political message other than their own.

      You have no evidence upon which you can draw such a broad inference.

      The only thing you can conclude with any certainty is that these developers are intolerant of some messages different from their own, delivered in certain ways. That probably describes everybody who cares about anything.

      Take me for example. I'm a nerd. That makes me intolerant of political messages based on sloppy logic.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      So basically these developers are intolerant of any type of political message other than their own.

      You say "any type" like Trump's messages of hate and intolerance are typical political speech. Well, they aren't.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:30PM (#52950217)

    As long as you think EXACTLY the way they do.

    Of course if he was "shitposting" Trump, that would be A-OK, right?

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • No need, just quote him on any topic. He is after all completely hilarious, in a scary way.
    • by Osgeld ( 1900440 )

      whats this party shit? I am not a trump supporter but I wont enable children to shitbag any candidate

       

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @05:09AM (#52952459) Homepage Journal

      You keep using that word. I don't think it means what you think it means.

      When they, by which I assume you mean the Democrats, say they are tolerant, they mean of things that people have no choice over. Gender, sexuality, race etc. They don't mean that they will tolerate any and all political views without condemnation or shunning.

      Political ideas are not a protected class, they are something each person chooses and will be judged on.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:34PM (#52950237)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Blacklisting again (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:35PM (#52950251)

    And so, in the name of "tolerance", they consigned heterodox unbelievers to a blacklist.

    Palmer Lucky is Brendon Eich 2.0.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:37PM (#52950265)

    Can they not even see what parodies of themselves they've become?

    TV tells them someone is hitler and they all try to out-tantrum one another.

    It's not even about supporting Trump anymore, it's about being ashamed to stand with or anywhere near these people. They don't have any liberal values. They run on feigned indignation and trying to publicly shame others.

    It's pathetic. Pull yourselves together, you numbnuts.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      It's the way the left has been since the 1920s. Usually it was confined to doctrinal infighting among Leninists, Trotskyites, and other socialist factions. Usually once one faction had established dominance they simply became authoritarians, rejecting any punishing all dissent.

      One of the best party amusements has always been exposing conflicting elements among leftists. Years ago when AIDS was peaking, you'd find a leftist, usually a vegan, who favored animal rights, and then an AIDS activist and then in

    • There's been a rise in the term "regressive left" for a while. And for good reason, the left(especially progressives and the social justice clique) have been at the forefront of anti-democratic beliefs for quite a while(see the big push on free speech zones, safe spaces, no-platforming, violent protests against individuals, anti-individualist choices, etc). And unlike the right, that cast and purged their crazies out, the left is still embracing theirs and parroting their views. In many cases, I'm going to guess that it's because they're afraid of being labeled "racists/sexists/homophobes/misogynists/etc" that the regressive left has been using to attack anyone who doesn't share their insular worldview.

      Anyone who's been paying attention to tech culture or gaming culture will notice it. The regressive left is against free expression, they only want their view points, their ideals, and their versions of vidya. And are willing to throw hissyfits over any of this. They have no qualms about actually harassing people, they'll run ops to do it(see con [heatst.com] leaks) [youtu.be], and all [lianakerzner.com] the rest of the nasty shit that they claim those on the right do. Which some people have figured out is pure projection on their part.

  • Without hate speech, how could we rag on republicans?

  • by StandardCell ( 589682 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @06:51PM (#52950369)
    What is astonishing to me is the level of rhetoric and the stretch of logic that has come into place since our Alien vs. Predator presidential race (i.e. whoever wins, we lose). Now we have a situation just like the Mozilla debacle with Brendan Eich except that it is much much flimsier an argument this time around.

    But here's the thing, Insomniac and Polytron management: your job is to make money for the investors of your company, not to use them as some political tool because you disagree with the politics of one of the employees of Oculus. Period.

    These decisions will only harm these companies financially because of diminished interest from people who own an Oculus. Unless the management has concrete data that their continued support of the Oculus will harm their sales due to the political connection (and I'll bet diamonds to dollars that they don't), then the boards of directors of all of these companies should direct the executive management of the companies that withdrew support for Oculus to reverse their decision or be terminated for breach of fiduciary duty.

    Enough of this SJW bullshit, especially when investor money and returns are at stake and the backlash from these actions could be worse. E McNeill is totally correct - if you want to fight a Trump supporter, put your own money up rather than trying to suppress others as if you were some Soviet-era state enterprise licking the boots of the party you support.
    • Insomniac is a privately owned company. I'm not sure about Polytron, but given Phil Fish's history, it's likely privately owned as well.

      • I am really talking about the owners, who a board would normally represent. If they're too small to have a board, then it is the primary owners or investors. If the management bankrolled the company 100% themselves, then they can do what they wish. Nevertheless, it's still monumentally stupid to mix your business with politics rather than take a neutral stance and appeal to a broad audience unless you have concrete data that your revenue will be impacted less by not developing for VR than from the custom
        • Nevertheless, it's still monumentally stupid to mix your business with politics

          Insomniac has been around for over 20 years making highly acclaimed and successful games through four generations of consoles. I'm pretty sure they don't need business advice from some random asshole on Slashdot.

    • You know a lot of companies have missions and ideals other than just making money. Are you an investor for Insomniac? Do you have any evidence that the board is not behind this decision? Because otherwise your post is pointless.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      But here's the thing, Insomniac and Polytron management: your job is to make money for the investors of your company, not to use them as some political tool because you disagree with the politics of one of the employees of Oculus. Period.

      And a large part of that job is to maintain a staff of key people who can do the work needed to make this profit. So if enough people threaten to walk, management may have to appease them.

      Can Oculus Rift survive without Luckey? Probably. Can they survive without the support of the developers that are threatening to drop support? Maybe. So it will be an interesting standoff.

    • by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Friday September 23, 2016 @09:01PM (#52951055) Homepage Journal

      I find that a reputation for ethics helps in business. One doesn't gain such a reputation by supporting bad action or standing by while it happens. Now in this case, a good deal of the message was outright lies, and the rest was subverting the comment system with robots. I certainly will do what I can to show my strong disapproval of such actions, and my refusing to do business with that sort of liar and cheat and advocating that others make the same refusal is one of the ways that society deals with liars and cheats.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      In the case of Eich his staying might have negatively affected Mozilla. That's why he quit.

  • Nonsense (Score:4, Insightful)

    by sexconker ( 1179573 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @07:00PM (#52950427)

    "This backlash is nonsense," said James Green, co-founder of VR developer Carbon Games. "I absolutely support him doing whatever he wants politically if it's legal. To take any other position is against American values."

    I have little to no interest in VR, and negative interest in Oculus. But I now know of Carbon Games and have a respectful view of them.

    Conversely, I also now know of Polytron and have a negative opinion of them. Insomniac was also a 2nd rate developer and now I have further reason to ignore them.

  • Look, we all get to make free choices. If those choices piss off others who disagree, so be it. The ONLY thing that really matters - fundamentally - is the Constitution, which DOES say "Congress shall make no law..." but does NOT say "There shall be no social media reactions...". Easy-squeazy, baby!
    • "Social media reactions" is basically mob rule. Are you really advocating that mob rule is a desirable characteristic for a society?

      • "Social media reactions" is basically mob rule. Are you really advocating that mob rule is a desirable characteristic for a society?

        As compared to the oligarchy we're living in now, at least it would be democratic. The only motivation which works on the upper class is torches and pitchforks. The fear of that showing up is supposed to lead them to provide at least bread and circuses, if not education. But the bread and circus system is breaking down...

  • by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Friday September 23, 2016 @07:17PM (#52950519) Homepage Journal

    "Shitposting" is fraud rather than speech for a few reasons.

    It is knowingly false. For example, "shitposters" distribute a purported photo of Hillary Clinton in blackface with Bill, which doesn't match her eye color or her and Bill's appearance at the time [snopes.com]. But they keep distributing it.

    They then spoof the comment system by having robots upmod posts and downmod their detractors, thus fraudulently promoting their comments as highly regarded.

    They mis-state the first amendment of the constitution by telling people that reactions to their abuse are hypocritical and against the first amendment, when the first amendment does not protect anyone from the consequences of their speech, nor does it promise anyone the podium of their choice.

    Taking action to show your disapproval of such action is laudable.

    • by Kohath ( 38547 )

      "If I disapprove, it's not speech." Do you support blacklisting Palmer Luckey and others like him, Bruce Perens?

  • by Daetrin ( 576516 ) on Friday September 23, 2016 @07:52PM (#52950709)

    "This backlash is nonsense," said James Green, co-founder of VR developer Carbon Games. "I absolutely support him doing whatever he wants politically if it's legal. To take any other position is against American values."

    I think you meant to say you absolutely support other people doing what they want politically if it's legal, such as disagreeing with Luckey, or boycotting his product, or raising money for Clinton in response. Because taking any other position would be against American values _and_ hypocritical, right?

    And yes, he's perfectly within his rights to say what he said, and i'm within my rights to point out the contradiction, and other people are within their rights to respond to me with disagreements, and etc. Saying that one person gets to have their say and everyone else needs to shut up about it after that is not how political discourse works.

  • by Bruce Perens ( 3872 ) <bruce@perens.com> on Friday September 23, 2016 @08:40PM (#52950951) Homepage Journal

    It's OK to refuse to tolerate intolerance. Indeed, it's something you need to do.

  • Free Speech (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hduff ( 570443 ) <hoytduff@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Friday September 23, 2016 @11:16PM (#52951567) Homepage Journal

    This is free speech working the way it should work.

      I refer you to the XKCD panels about the First Amendment.
    http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/fr... [xkcd.com]

  • by malx ( 7723 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @04:30AM (#52952409)

    I wonder what the people supporting this will say when the Trump-et crowd hounds someone out of their job for donating to the "racist, segregationist, pro-violence-on-cops Black Lives Matter hate group"?

    You don't think that's a fair description of BLM? Try explaining your reasons to the baying mob.

    No, these attacks on Luckey, Brendan Eich and so forth aren't censorship, exactly, but they are certainly intimidation, and an attempt to move certain political positions outside the realm of legitimate discussion. That's not something I welcome, and nor will the people doing it when they discover their opponents can do it to them as well.

  • by truedfx ( 802492 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @05:12AM (#52952475)

    "This backlash is nonsense," said James Green, co-founder of VR developer Carbon Games. "I absolutely support him doing whatever he wants politically if it's legal. To take any other position is against American values."

    Pulling support for Oculus Rift is also political and legal. If James Green doesn't support this just as well, then by his own logic, he is taking a position against American values.

  • by ooloorie ( 4394035 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @05:32AM (#52952515)

    A game developer boycotting a platform, and hence forego millions in profits, is a good illustration of the idea that money and the actions it pays for amounts to political speech.

    As for the choice these game developers are making, I think they are a bit naive. Hillary Clinton and her wealthy supporters, PACs, and affiliated groups, have a large number of highly skilled political message consultants and PR experts working for her, trying to manipulate public opinion in her favor, including through massive use of social media. The only thing that is remarkable about someone sinking millions into an organization whose job is to create "shitposts" about Hillary on social media is what an inept attempt at PR it actually is.

    As usual, we have Hillary Clinton's well-oiled political machinery versus Donald Trump's incompetent attempt at running a political campaign. The really remarkable thing is that Hillary Clinton is such a lousy candidate and her political program is so bad that she still is struggling to put together a decisive win. Just imagine how poorly she would be doing if she actually ran against a serious candidate.

  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @11:23AM (#52953581)

    we could get a law written that forbids negative advertising towards the other candidate.

    I'm kinda tired of seeing all the " Look how bad X is for this position because of Y " ads that dominate the airways this time of year.

    I would much rather see " I believe I'm the better choice for the position because of the following accomplishments or strengths I posses " instead.

    Considering neither candidate has much to brag about, the number of ads would be quite limited in number.

    A win-win all the way around.

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