Pokemon Go Leads to Reckless Driving, Injuries, and A Corpse (chicagotribune.com) 130
Since its release Wednesday night, Pokemon Go has already gone on to become the top-grossing game in the three countries where it's available, and Forbes contributor Tero Kuittinen calls it "the first example of an AR product becoming a national obsession." An anonymous Slashdot reader writes:
Some fans are now tweeting about playing the game while driving, and the Chicago Tribune quotes one user who says "Pokemon Go put me in the ER last night... Not even 30 minutes after the release...I slipped and fell down a ditch." In Australia the game has been leading some players to their local police station, and a woman in Wyoming reports that the game actually led her to a dead body floating in a river. And at least one Pokemon Go screenshot has gone viral. It shows a man capturing a Pokemon while his wife gives birth.
The app's popularity has created lagging servers and forced Niantic to delay its international roll-out, meaning "Those who have already downloaded the game in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand can still play it, while those in the U.K., the Netherlands and other countries will have to wait." Meanwhile, Motherboard warns that a malicious sideloaded version of Pokemon Go is being distributed that actually installs a backdoor on Android devices, and also reports that some players are already spoofing their GPS coordinates in order to catch Pokemon without leaving their house.
The app's popularity has created lagging servers and forced Niantic to delay its international roll-out, meaning "Those who have already downloaded the game in the U.S., Australia and New Zealand can still play it, while those in the U.K., the Netherlands and other countries will have to wait." Meanwhile, Motherboard warns that a malicious sideloaded version of Pokemon Go is being distributed that actually installs a backdoor on Android devices, and also reports that some players are already spoofing their GPS coordinates in order to catch Pokemon without leaving their house.
I give this about two weeks. (Score:5, Funny)
Once everyone remembers that physical activity and going outside are exactly the things they're trying to get away from by playing video games, people will get sick of this.
All that's left is to predict the total body count.
Re: I give this about two weeks. (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
PokeGo is actually a ridiculously social endeavor.
You're saying that as if it were a good thing.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: I give this about two weeks. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
So you're on Slashdot during the fun part, then put down your phone when the guy starts reading the Bible and telling people not to touch each oher unless it's to have babies?
Clearly you have a twisted perception of fun. You must be a Gentoo user.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
As a Catholic, I have to ask, what are you smoking? I used to sing with the folk band, and even ran the sound board many times. What makes you think that music isn't allowed at mass?
Re: (Score:1)
Re:I give this about two weeks. (Score:4, Informative)
Re: I give this about two weeks. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
As an ingress player, I couldn't disagree with you more.
Having said that, I took a quick look at pokemon and although interesting, it's surely not my game. There are similarities to ingress, but it's also targeted at a very different audience. Another drawback I saw was their pricing scheme, they seem mostly interested in you dollars, whereas ingress is totally free to play, with only a few 'gimmicks' sold for the die-hard players, and surely will not drain your wallet till the max.
On-topic - ingress has pu
Re: (Score:2)
idk man, Ingress has survived 3 whole years so far and is still doing pretty well.... I mean, it probably depends on where you live of course.
I don't see Pokemon Go dying out quickly at all.
Best comment is from a kid (Score:2)
Most of these people are adults. Don't they have anything better to do?
Sadly, no. No they don't. They'd love a job, though. Your dad hiring?
Re: (Score:2)
all of them married, 2 of them with child’s.
Of course, you'd like to punch them in the face, when they walk next to you with they eyes stuck on the screen and suddenly turn around and change directions, but there must be something in the game for such a heavy time / money investment. ( seems like you need last generation phones to enjoy the game).
I'd say that on my nerdimeter the worst of them scores a 7.50 out of 10.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Typical fat, lazy Americans (Score:1)
Why go outside and explore your environment when you can sit on your fat, artery-clogged ass and do nothing? Every day wall-E becomes more reality than fiction.
Re: (Score:2)
1) root the phone.
3) flash a custom recovery.
2) install xposed via a custom recovery.
3) install mock mock gps xposed module to fool Niantic's mock gps detection.
4) Install a gps spoof app.
5) Enable the gps spoof app via Android developer tools.
That is too much work to put everything together for a lazy American, fat or not.
I did it because I wanted to test the game and it wasn't released on my country yet. I got bored really fast.
But developing a farming bot for t
Re: a few comments (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: a few comments (Score:1)
By people you mean the property owners leaving their property in a state of disarray not suitable for proper Pokemon chasing, right?!
This is the only logical conclusion I can come to from your comment.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
By people you mean the property owners leaving their property in a state of disarray not suitable for proper Pokemon chasing, right?!
This is the only logical conclusion I can come to from your comment.
If that's the only way you can see it - that everything is always someone else's fault - then you're part of the problem.
Re: (Score:3)
You'll understand if one day you make enough money to own something and pay taxes.
Re: (Score:2)
If that's the only way you can see it - that everything is always someone else's fault - then you're part of the problem.
The problem is not him, it's the legal system which enables him, brought to you from a country where thieves can sue their victims when they hurt themselves during a break-in. ... and win.
Re: (Score:2)
Hey now, that's crazy talk. That would mean criminals couldn't blame anyone but themselves when they commit a crime or fat people couldn't blame their "genes" when they refuse to eat a vegetable or walk up a flight of stairs.
That kind of attitude simply won't do around here. I'm surprised you got modded up. Give it time, you'll be modded to oblivion for stating such a heretical idea.
Re: (Score:2)
Or, better yet, hold people responsible for their own actions..
People are always susceptible to doing dumb stuff, one responsibility of technology makers is to be aware that people sometimes do dumb things with their technology.
The Tesla autopilot is an example from early this week, it lulls you into tuning out on the road and letting the AI drive.
This is another facet, augmented reality mixes virtual games with real environments. Someone who deliberately hung toys next to a highway for drivers to grab as they went by would rightly be criticized for luring people into
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
just disable the game when in moving vehicles
I ride the bus and the train. I'm not driving. I can hit many Ingress portals on both routes. Why would you want to ruin it for me? Why do you hate me so? What did I do to you? /me 's eyes start to well up.
Re: (Score:2)
At least with Ingress, you get speed locked if you end up with an average speed over 35mph.
Re: (Score:2)
Also, just disable the game when in moving vehicles. I mean, smartphones can detect motion, right? If something is over 5mph, just stop it.
People can run over 5 MPH, you know.
Took my son around to play it (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Who decided what landmarks get in the database?
Niantic also runs the augmented reality game "Ingress", where players submit landmarks to be used as "portals" in the game. My guess is they reuse that information for Pokemon Go. In Ingress, cemeteries are popular portal locations due to the high density of artistic monuments, resulting in lots of in-game progress with little moving around. If Niantic didn't filter those for Pokemon Go, it could become a bit of a Goth game.
Re: (Score:1)
Ingress hasn't allowed new portal submissions in well over a year. btw. Initially Ingress was seeded with a lot of historical markers from HMDB.org. There are certainly a lot of silly portals, one that comes to mind is one of the big red concrete balls in front of a Target, with the portal being named "Big Red Ball of Peace" or something.
Re: (Score:2)
It was at least a year ago that the new portal submissions was disabled in the scanner. I think the portal submission queue was really a year or so backlogged. Mostly they've focused on new mission submissions lately I think. Those seem to be backlogged about 3 weeks to a month.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Took my son around to play it (Score:4, Informative)
In that game users could submit ideas for the spots that would become portals(now pokemon stops). They are supposed to be places of interest, sculptures, murials, historic or interesting buildings. I'm proud (or sad) to say that many of the spots in my area were submitted by me a couple years ago.
Eejits. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
News media not doing their job (Score:5, Funny)
This is admittedly interesting news, but what I'm really dying to know is what Kim Kardashian has to say about Pokemon Go.
I'd also like to know more about the top 10 weirdest things that have happened to people while playing Pokemon Go and how to easily make hundreds of dollars a week by playing Pokemon Go.
Re: (Score:2)
What a pity (Score:2, Funny)
I'd strongly suggest that people not trespass in the deep south of the US, as you can be legally shot and killed for that.
I'm also expecting the first of many lawsuits any day now, as users fall in ditches and rivers, and wander onto interstate Highways.
These are millenials, folks -
Re: (Score:2)
Implying you can generalize about a generation as a whole, and that generalizations are true just because it is stated - which would imply the person making it has quite a lack of capacity for rudimentary logical reasoning skills.
But perhaps he has at least as good skills as your ability to construct a sentence.
While you over-react to my apparently insufferable commentary over your beloved millenials in a manner that would do a social justice warrier proud, you lose site of the basis of the argument, which is not specifically a condemnation of millennials, who are indeed a group what I feel has suffered abuse at the hands of well meaning but ultimately stupid parents and society. We never let them grow up.
The argument is tha
Re: (Score:2)
Oh shut up. You cannot be legally shot and killed for trespassing alone.
Um-huh. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new... [dailymail.co.uk]
Um-huh http://wbt.com/greenville-man-... [wbt.com]
In Texas, Property is more valuable than human life - like it or not, it is codified. http://nation.time.com/2013/06... [time.com]
Specifically, acquittals were provided for people who shot and kiled another person over a guy who was looking for a hooker on Craigslist, she didn't put out, os he followed her to her car and shot her from behind, which led to her death - verdict - acquittal.
Other justifiable homicides in Texas, as
Re: (Score:2)
While you are completely correct on the Texas laws allowing people to be shot for basically setting foot on your property (I'm in the state so I should know), and I also agree with you on the its ridiculous to assume lawsuits will result for stupid people not paying attention, I wholeheartedly resent your 'millenials are idiots argument.'
I am part of said generation and can honestly say at this point, this generation is no different than the previous ones, it is just much easier to criticize us because of t
Re: (Score:2)
While you are completely correct on the Texas laws allowing people to be shot for basically setting foot on your property (I'm in the state so I should know), and I also agree with you on the its ridiculous to assume lawsuits will result for stupid people not paying attention, I wholeheartedly resent your 'millenials are idiots argument.'
Good. Then again, if I had just formed my opinion out of whole cloth, there might be some justification for your outrage. These are researched and ongoing issues.
But before we even go there, there is no question that biologically the millennial generation has no particular differences between themselves and the get off my lawn crown, they have been thoroughly screwed over by parents and society.
Oh-oh, perhaps this isn't going in the direction you want the olde farte to go.
Society, with it's self este
Re: (Score:2)
I disagree that the problems are as widespread as we are lead to believe. Working off of your same anecdotal evidence, at my office I have the opposite experience. Most of the developers I am working with at this point are of the millenial generation (in my office at least) and with two notable exceptions (they are *closer* to the stereotype, but not full fledged), are extremely hard working, very intelligent, and not entitled/delusion. Hell, one of my co-workers that I am still friends with just moved o
Re: (Score:2)
I disagree that the problems are as widespread as we are lead to believe.
I don't know if you work in a university environment, but I know with 100 percent certainty that they spend a lot of time money and effort to wean the childrenand their parents from each other. Non research grant money, which they are loathe to do. You are saying this is a waste of money and completely mistaken thinking? Perhaps you are correct, I just read all of the data, and along with others come to a 100 percent wrong conclusion. After all, iit is not unusual to hear olde fartes bleaing about those da
Re: (Score:2)
No I work at a privately held company. I do however agree a lot of that is wasted on what amounts to corner case extremes. The large majority of these people will split themselves eventually out of necessity, just like in times past. I've seen a few that came into companies (a couple at one of our other offices even) that really needed to split, but once the company actually started asking real things of them it was a sink or swim situation and most swam (albeit with some growing pains).
There absolutely
Re: (Score:2)
That says nore about texas juries allowing murder if you are the "right" type of person than anything about tresspassing.
The go ahead and wander all over Texas, I hear there is a Pokemon in the back yard of that mobile home with the TransCamaro on cinder blocks in teh front yard, , and the confederate flag. Go get it! If you are the right type, you have nothing to worry about.
"XXX put me in the ER last night, .." (Score:5, Funny)
There is only one solution for XXX = "I myself".
If Pokemon can get one into the ER and one is not just an undiagnosed case of epilepsy than oneself is responsible.
What is it with the people? Did nobody do OHSAS for your everyday life?
Only on the job you have people thinking for you.
And reminding you about the previously unkown hazzard, slippery when wet?
Don't drill into a generator?
When grinding use protective googles?
When loud use ear plugs?
Don't let idiots handle guns?
Sometimes I think we need Darwinism 4.0-beta3, natural selection by degree of situation awareness.
Thank you Pokemon you got rid of at least some people,
sadly the safety standard in todays cars is too high and people survive their dumbness and even Pokemon!
Yes, this was a rant!
Re: (Score:2)
Drink drivers. Quite possibly the leading cause of people ending up in the ER without doing something stupid and self inflicted.
Yet nature selects for the genes of people who are better at avoiding situations where inebriated drivers may kill or maim them.
Re: (Score:2)
My son found a dog (Score:2)
My son (mid 20's) was out around midnight the other night wandering around our development, playing Pokemon Go. He noticed a big dog wandering around near him, and then looked up to see a telephone pole with a "lost dog" poster that matched the dog he was looking at. He called the number on the sign, and the owners came to collect the dog.
Re: (Score:2)
What, he didn't catch it? He'll never get that perfect Pokedex now.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: My son found a dog (Score:3, Funny)
You let your 20 something son out of the house all by hisself at midnight? You are a bad parent. You should be arrested for neglect.
Sounds about right (Score:2)
Playing while driving, injuries, dead bodies, people blocking emergency services buildings... yup, that's how I remember Ingress. The only difference I can see is that the Pokemon game lore is comprehensible.
Royalty payments... (Score:1)
Anyone know if the Ingress developers are getting royalties on this?
Re: (Score:2)
The Ingress developers *wrote* it.
If you play while driving ... (Score:1)
... that should be grounds for your insurance company to jack up your rates when you come up for renewal.
Same goes for doing anything else reckless while driving, like watching a movie (obviously excluding guys who self-nominate for the Darwin Award, like this guy [usatoday.com]).
Of course, if you play while driving and don't brag about it, your insurance company will never know. But that's the "real" idea here: We don't want to encourage others to drive unsafely, and when you brag about driving unsafely, it tends to en
Pokemon thug (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
no, those "commit suicide"
Re: (Score:1)
This is what happens when you're a criminal. Don't want to be shot? Don't be a criminal.
Re: (Score:1)
This is what happens when you're a criminal. Don't want to be shot? Don't be a criminal.
Why do you need privacy if you nothing to hide?
Re: (Score:1)
Yep, you just keep on excusing the jackbooted thugs who commit cold blooded murder under color of law, you racist fuck
Re: (Score:2)
Or perhaps reaching for your license after informing a police officer you conceal carry and being asked not to reach for your license?
Re: (Score:2)
It's a moving violation. "Crime" or not, it is against the law and it is punishable. And it would be difficult to argue that it is against the law but not a "crime". Merriam Webster defines "crime" as "an illegal act".
Not all of them do. Not an identifiable specific "victim". Malicious destruction of property is a crime. In Massachusetts it can be either a misdemeanor or
Re: (Score:2)
And it would be difficult to argue that it is against the law but not a "crime". Merriam Webster defines "crime" as "an illegal act".
They are explicitly not crimes. If they were, you'd have increased legal protections. They are "infractions" and all that goes with that.
Dictionary definitions are unrelated to the legal definitions. If you want to chime in on a definition for a legal term, consult a legal dictionary, not an English dictionary. Many terms are used in Law and English that don't have the same definition for both.
Re: (Score:1)
This is what happens when you're a criminal. Don't want to be shot? Don't be a criminal.
Tell that to Philando Castille [washingtonpost.com].
Re: (Score:2)
Mr. Castile had a record of 52 traffic stops, including operating after revocation of license and "not carrying a proper insurance card". Nonetheless I will consider your suggestion, very seriously, after you tell me: did Mr. Castile, after informing the police that he had a licensed firearm with him, and being told not to move - did he then move, or did he not? And did he "display" the gun
Re: (Score:2)
[after] being told not to move - did he then move, or did he not?
He was told to not move and told to present his license. Regardless of which he complied with, he would have been not complying with the order of an officer. There was a professor beaten at the US border coming back from Canada for doing that (ordered out of his car, and ordered into his car, and beaten for not complying with both mutually-exclusive orders at the same time.
Apparently, being confused is a capital crime.
Re: (Score:1)
Mr. Castile had a record of 52 traffic stops, including operating after revocation of license and "not carrying a proper insurance card". Nonetheless I will consider your suggestion, very seriously, after you tell me: did Mr. Castile, after informing the police that he had a licensed firearm with him, and being told not to move - did he then move, or did he not? And did he "display" the gun or not? An investigation has been opened as to justification or lack of it, and possible culpability. Let's wait for the process to finish investigating. If at that time, you want to criticize the process, then that would be entirely appropriate.
I seriously doubt that anyone with a open mind could look at his "crime of the century" driving record and conclude anything other than he was repeatedly cited for DWB.