Internet hunting bans still allow the killing of laptops
Ok, so Internet Hunting is not your gig...how about remotely blasting pellets into a poor defenseless laptop? Thought so. As recently demonstrated by the thousands of people over the course of a single day who attempted to remotely control Travis Puderbaugh's Internet gun — there's just something really satisfying about firing a weapon over the Internet (we don't find this surprising considering how often we viewed those early "coffee cams" for the sheer novelty of the experience).
Trav says he built his gun for about $200 from instructions available (gulp) "online." Sure, there are
Federal and California state bills (currently sitting on Ahnold's desk) which would ban Internet hunting, but these, thankfully, say nothing about our inalienable right to hunt and kill inanimate personal productivity devices from our vintage Herman Millers.