An unexpected catch:
In an informal investigation by Senators Jeffrey D. Klein and Diane J. Savino, staff members took a list of 100 registered sex offenders across New York City and compared it with locations where Pokémon Go players could collect virtual items or use other game features.
In 59 cases, those locations were within half a block of offenders' homes. The staff members, who played the game for two weeks, also found 57 Pokémon — which appear on players' phones as if they exist in the real world — near the offenders' homes, according to a report the senators released on Friday. Such overlap has been reported in other states, including California and North Carolina.
In New York, those discoveries prompted Mr. Klein, a Democrat who represents parts of the Bronx and Westchester County, and Ms. Savino, a Staten Island Democrat, to propose two pieces of legislation, scheduled to be introduced next week.
The first would prevent moderate or high-risk sex offenders from playing so-called augmented-reality games — like Pokémon Go — and the second would require the games' creators to cross-reference their virtual landscapes with lists of offenders' homes and remove any "in-game objective" within 100 feet of them.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 01 2016, @09:27AM
Besides, sex offenders as a group are not at a high risk to reoffend
Reoffend?
Since the sex offender registry includes 18 year olds with 17 year old girlfriends, underage same-age couples that were tried as adults for child porn possession, people with their own naked selfies tried for child porn possession, drunks peeing on a tree in the middle of the night close to an elementary school etc, etc...
... I'd say that (registered) "sex offenders" as a group are not at particularly high risk to even offend.
(I'm sure that there are actual sex offenders on that list as well, but too many innocents are on it for any meaningful usage.)