Apparently many states have passed laws against Internet hunting. This is hunting with a rifle controlled by an Internet connected trigger and camera.
There is no evidence that such 'Internet hunting' has ever been done but laws against it are now appearing on the books. The idea of Internet hunting may have been sparked by the actual use, by several military agencies around the world, of stationary machine guns and missile equipped drones that are operated from computer screens at a great distance.
Don't be surprised about laws against something that doesn't happen in the real world. Every state has laws on the books prohibiting the sale of liquor in bars to pregnant women.
A good friend of mine worked for the National Alcohol Research Center. It was her job, for a year, to travel around America and interview pregnant women who were drinking alcohol. She tried to find such women in nearly every bar in every poor neighborhood in the South, in big city immigrant and black neighborhoods and she never found even one woman. During a whole year with tens of thousands of miles traveled. Alcohol just
doesn't taste good to pregnant women.
However, I can't leave that factual story hanging on that unexpected outcome without her added comment that she had no trouble finding woman pregnant and drunk on Indian reservations.