That one sentence says it all. "A landowner can't limit access to their property and still have the limited liability protection." So unless you let anyone hunt without asking, you are liable.And a landowner can't hunt with the group he let's hunt on his property, that would be "tour guide". How a judge got this from the case in ? is unreal. For those that don't know, a dairy farmer had a school class in to tour his farm. He had covered the hay chutes in the haymow and tested them by walking on them himself. At the end of the tour the kids got to run and play in the haymow. The teacher stepped on one of the covered chutes and broke through, breaking an ankle and wrist. In court it was brought out that the teacher was a very large heavy woman, and the farmer knew that, so he was liable for not covering the chutes well enough to support her. So, I can see SOME liability for the farmer. How that case got expanded into the ruling covering liability for hunting and fishing is beyond me, but this is real and if legislators don't change it, you know there will be some cases in court soon. The hunter himself will have no control, it will be his insurance company trying to get out of paying his medical costs that will sue the landowner. That's why signing a waiver before you go hunting will have no effect, your insurance company didn't sign that waiver. And you KNOW some guy will try to get some hunting property by using this.