Facebook Pulls Virtual Reality Shooting Game From Conference, Apologises

about 6 years in Huffpost

Facebook has finally pulled a controversial shooting virtual reality game demonstration from the Conservative Political Action Conference.
Facebook's booth at the conference in Maryland included the game, which had players shooting virtual people, less than two weeks after 17 people were shot dead at Florida's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.
In Bullet Train, created by Epic Games, players fire on "resistance forces" at a train station. The demo featured Facebook's Oculus virtual reality headset, making the scenes particularly realistic for players.
The website for Bullet Train boasts that players are "in the middle of the action," with Oculus Touch motion-controllers allowing players to "physically interact with an array of weapons, from guns to grenades to missiles, and even feel them through haptic feedback."
The chilling exhibit was first exposed by reporter Scott Morrow of Now This, who posted a video of a player aiming at a Bullet Train scene on Twitter Friday.
After Morrow reached out, Hugh Barra, Facebook's vice president of virtual reality, tweeted back that the game demo was removed, noting: "We got this wrong."
Bullet Train is part of a standard set of VR game demos that are shown at venues like CPAC. Facebook said it had removed all violent games from the demo Friday, The Washington Post reported.

Facebook is at CPAC and they have a VR shooting game pic.twitter.com/wmV23jezpN
— Sean Morrow (@snmrrw) February 23, 2018

We removed the demo & regret failing to do so at the start. We got this wrong. Our demos come w a standard set of content, some are action games w violence. These shouldn't have been present, especially in light of recent events & out of respect for the victims & their families.
— Hugo Barra (@hbarra) February 23, 2018

Bullet Train was part of the Facebook exhibit when National Rifle Association head Wayne LaPierre spoke at CPAC Thursday to angrily blast efforts at greater gun control in the wake of the Florida shootings, calling them efforts to "make you less free." He blamed the killings on the "failure of school security, the failure of the family."
Barra's tweeted response to Morrow about withdrawing violent games from the CPAC exhibit triggered a storm of angry comments:

Why even have them there BEFORE Parkland. Stop sucking up to the Right for some blood money!
— MamaGina (@Ginas1369) February 24, 2018

The real question is why was Facebook at a gathering of hatemongers in the first place?
— Matt Shiv (@shivvy) February 24, 2018

Lookin a bit MySpace these days Facebook maybe that your day in the sun is done. Russians and CPAC ... not really sort if place I'd want to advertise in
— (((Hmmmm.....))) (@TwitWhatter) February 24, 2018

Why is @facebook at the @NRA ? Why are you promoting gun violence? It's time for us all to boycott @facebook.
— Nancy Street (@NancyDStreet) February 24, 2018

A one time apology to save face doesn't fix this. Creating a culture of violence with games no matter the timing is a big problem. You can't hope to end a culture of violence by pushing violent content.
— Jeff Hatz (@Jeff_Hatz) February 24, 2018

Duh
— TR (@tenax666) February 24, 2018

Facebook's last virtual reality blunder involved a "tour" of damage wreaked by Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico. Critics called that tone-deaf stunt "disaster tourism," and accused the company of using the suffering of the island to promote itself.

Zuck showing off seriously weird VR hurricane disaster tourism on FB right now btw https://t.co/kjbmJqAAMfpic.twitter.com/KxlmQzBK3H
— Carl Franzen (@carlfranzen) October 9, 2017

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg responded to critics by saying he was attempting to use virtual reality to evoke empathy and raise awareness about the disaster.

Mark Zuckerberg talks about the dire situation in Puerto Rico as an AR toon.
"Crazy to feel like we're in the middle of it."
End me. pic.twitter.com/a7mOoCIlHC
— Gene Park (@GenePark) October 9, 2017

Facebook is now under pressure since investigators revealed that it provided a key platform for fake posts and ads by Russian interferings in the U.S. presidential election. The social media site has more recently been used to spread cooked-up conspiracy theories against Parkland students advocating for gun control.

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