Sims Artists Union Female Hair 120

Posted on
Second Life Viewer
Developer(s)Linden Lab
Initial releaseJune 23, 2003; 16 years ago
Stable release
Preview release
6.0.0.518949 / August 24, 2018; 11 months ago
Engine
Platform
  • Linux (Development paused)
LicenseOpen-source
Websitewww.secondlife.com
Second Life Server
Developer(s)Linden Lab
Initial releaseJune 23, 2003; 16 years ago
Stable release
Engine
  • proprietary software
PlatformLinux
LicenseProprietary
Websitewww.secondlife.com

Second Life is an online virtual world, developed and owned by the San Francisco-based firm Linden Lab and launched on June 23, 2003. By 2013, Second Life had approximately one million regular users[1]; at the end of 2017 active user count totals 'between 800,000 and 900,000'.[2] In many ways, Second Life is similar to massively multiplayer online role-playing games; however, Linden Lab is emphatic that their creation is not a game: 'There is no manufactured conflict, no set objective'.[3]

The HP Pavilion X360 14-BA120TX 14' 2-in-1 Laptop features cutting-edge hardware and preloaded software in its adaptable design, making it a reliable companion for bolstering productivity. Thanks to a 14” touchscreen interface, it lets you access menus, browse content, or perform commands all through your fingertips.

  • Nov 18, 2010. Updated/Fixed Things by Myos. Download at The Sims Artists Union. 2010 at 12:52 PM. My Sims are wearing those pants and shoes at this moment. If it ain't broke. The picture is the preview pic of the hair you were talking about. Trina November 19, 2010.
  • An always-on video channel featuring programming hand selected by Art21. Curated by Art21 staff, with guest contributions from artists, educators, and more.

The virtual world can be accessed freely via Linden Lab's own client programs or via alternative third-party viewers.[4][5]Second Life users, also called residents, create virtual representations of themselves, called avatars, and are able to interact with places, objects and other avatars. They can explore the world (known as the grid), meet other residents, socialize, participate in both individual and group activities, build, create, shop, and trade virtual property and services with one another.

The platform principally features 3D-based user-generated content. Second Life also has its own virtual currency, the Linden Dollar, which is exchangeable with real world currency.[6]

Second Life is intended for people aged 16 and over, with the exception of 13–15-year-old users, who are restricted to the Second Life region of a sponsoring institution (e.g., a school).[7][8]

Built into the software is a 3D modeling tool based on simple geometric shapes that allows residents to build virtual objects. There is also a procedural scripting language, Linden Scripting Language, which can be used to add interactivity to objects. Sculpted prims (sculpties), mesh, textures for clothing or other objects, animations, and gestures can be created using external software and imported. The Second Life terms of service provide that users retain copyright for any content they create, and the server and client provide simple digital rights management (DRM) functions.[7][9][10] However, Linden Lab changed their terms of service in August 2013 to be able to use user-generated content for any purpose.[11] The new terms of service prevent users from using textures from third-party texture services, as some of them pointed out explicitly.[12]

  • 5Technology
  • 6Applications
  • 7Criticism and controversy
  • 8In popular culture

History[edit]

Philip Rosedale, founder of Second Life.

In 1999, Philip Rosedale formed Linden Lab with the intention of developing computer hardware to allow people to become immersed in a virtual world. In its earliest form, the company struggled to produce a commercial version of the hardware, known as 'The Rig', which in prototype form was seen as a clunky steel contraption with computer monitors worn on shoulders.[13] That vision changed into the software application Linden World, in which people participated in task-based games and socializing in a three-dimensional online environment.[14] That effort eventually transformed into the better known, user-centered Second Life.[15] Although he was familiar with the metaverse of Neal Stephenson's novel Snow Crash, Rosedale has said that his vision of virtual worlds predates that book, and that he conducted early virtual world experiments during his college years at the University of California, San Diego, where he studied physics.[16]

In 2005 and 2006, Second Life began to receive significant media attention, including a cover story in BusinessWeek magazine featuring the virtual world and Second Life avatar Anshe Chung.[17] By that time, Anshe Chung had become Second Life's poster child and symbol for the economic opportunities that the virtual world offers to its residents. At the same time, the service saw a period of exponential growth of its user base.

On December 11, 2007, Cory Ondrejka, who helped program Second Life, was forced to resign as chief technology officer.[18]

In January 2008, residents spent a total of 28,274,505 hours 'inworld' and on average 38,000 residents were logged in at any moment. The maximum concurrency (number of avatars inworld) recorded is 88,200 in the first quarter of 2009[19]

On March 14, 2008, Rosedale announced plans to step down from his position as Linden Lab CEO and to become chairman of Linden Lab's board of directors.[20] Rosedale announced Mark Kingdon as the new CEO effective May 15, 2008.[21]In 2010, Kingdon was replaced by Rosedale, who took over as Interim CEO. After four months, Rosedale abruptly stepped down from the Interim CEO position. It was announced in October 2010 that Bob Komin, Linden Lab's chief financial officer and chief operating officer, would take over the CEO job for the immediate future.[22]

In 2008, Second Life was honored at the 59th Annual Technology & Engineering Emmy Awards for advancing the development of online sites with user-generated content. Rosedale accepted the award.[23]

In May 2009, concurrent users averaged about 62,000.[24] As of May 2010, concurrent users averaged about 54,000.[citation needed] According to Tateru Nino of Engadget, the decline was due to new policies implemented by Linden Lab reducing the number of bots and campers.[25]

In June 2010, Linden Lab announced layoffs of 30% of its workforce.[26]

In November 2010, 21.3 million accounts were registered, although the company has not made public any statistics regarding actual long-term consistent usage.[27] However, Wagner James Au, who blogs and writes about Second Life, said in April 2013 that he had it on 'good authority' that 'Second Life's actual active userbase is about 600,000'.[28]

In 2015 alone, Second Life users had cashed out approximately $60,000,000 (60 million US dollar) and Second Life had an estimated GDP of $500,000,000 (500 million US dollar), higher than some small countries.[29]

Classification[edit]

During a 2001 meeting with investors, Rosedale noticed that the participants were particularly responsive to the collaborative, creative potential of Second Life. As a result, the initial objective-driven, gaming focus of Second Life was shifted to a more user-created, community-driven experience.[30]

Second Life's status as a virtual world, a computer game, or a talker, is frequently debated.[who?] Unlike a traditional computer game, Second Life does not have a designated objective, nor traditional game play mechanics or rules. It can also be argued that Second Life is a multi-user virtual world, because its virtual world facilitates interaction between multiple users. As it does not have any stipulated goals, it is irrelevant to talk about winning or losing in relation to Second Life. Likewise, unlike a traditional talker[vague], Second Life contains an extensive world that can be explored and interacted with, and it can be used purely as a creative tool set if the user so chooses. In March 2006, while speaking at Google TechTalks,[31] Rosedale said: 'So, we don't see this as a game. We see it as a platform.'

Second Life used to offer two main grids: one for adults (18+) and one for teens. In August 2010, Linden Lab closed the teen grid due to operating costs. Since then, users aged 16 and over can sign up for a free account.[32] Other limited accounts are available for educators who use Second Life with younger students.

Sims Artists Union Female Hair 120ml

There are three activity-based classifications, called 'Ratings', for sims in Second Life:

  1. General (formerly 'PG'—no extreme violence or nudity)
  2. Moderate (formerly 'Mature'—some violence, swearing, adult situations, some nudity)
  3. Adult (may contain overt sexual activity, nudity, and violence)

Residents and avatars[edit]

A human female avatar
Several avatars together

There is no charge for creating a Second Life account or for making use of the world for any period of time. Linden Lab reserves the right to charge for the creation of large numbers of multiple accounts for a single person (5 per household, 2 per 24 hours)[33] but at present does not do so. A Premium membership (US$11.99 monthly, US$32.97 quarterly, or US$99 annually) extends access to an increased level of technical support, and also pays an automatic stipend of L$300/week into the member's avatar account, and after 45 days that resident will receive a L$700 bonus, making it L$1,000 for that week. This amount has decreased since the original stipend of L$500, which is still paid to older accounts. Certain accounts created during an earlier period may receive L$400. This stipend, if changed into USD, means that the actual cost for the benefit of extended tech support for an annual payment of US$72 is only about US$14, depending on the currency exchange rates. However, the vast majority of casual users of Second Life do not upgrade beyond the free 'basic' account.

Avatars may take any form users choose (human, animal, vegetable, mineral, or a combination thereof) or residents may choose to resemble themselves as they are in real life.[34] They may choose even more abstract forms, given that almost every aspect of an avatar is fully customizable. Second Life Culture consists of many activities and behaviors that are also present in real life. A single resident account may have only one avatar at a time, although the appearance of this avatar can change between as many different forms as the Resident wishes. Avatar forms, like almost everything else in Second Life, can be either created by the user, or bought pre-made. A single person may also have multiple accounts, and thus appear to be multiple Residents (a person's multiple accounts are referred to as alts).

Avatars can travel via walking, running, vehicular access, flying, or teleportation. Because Second Life is such a vast virtual world, teleportation is used when avatars wish to travel instantly and efficiently. Once they reach their destination, they may travel in more conventional means at various speeds.

Avatars can communicate via local chat, group chat, global instant messaging (known as IM), and voice (public, private and group). Chatting is used for localized public conversations between two or more avatars, and is visible to any avatar within a given distance. IMs are used for private conversations, either between two avatars, or among the members of a group, or even between objects and avatars. Unlike chatting, IM communication does not depend on the participants being within a certain distance of each other. As of version 1.18.1.2, voice chat, both local and IM, was also available.Instant messages may optionally be sent to a Resident's email when the Resident is logged off, although message length is limited to 4096 bytes.[35]

Identities in Second Life can relate to the users' personality or creating their own character. It is based on their decisions on how to express themselves. Most avatars are human, but they can choose to be vampires or animals. Sometimes, what they choose does not relate to their offline selves.[36]

Economy[edit]

An avatar in the virtual world Second Life
User-generated content in the virtual world Second Life

Second Life has an internal economy and closed-loop virtual token called the 'Linden dollar (L$)'. L$ can be used to buy, sell, rent or trade land or goods and services with other users. The 'Linden Dollar' is a closed-loop virtual token for use only within the Second Life platform. Linden Dollars have no monetary value and are not redeemable for monetary value from Linden Lab. A resident with a surplus of Linden Dollars earned via a Second Life business or experiential play can request to refund their Linden Dollar surplus to PayPal. Linden Lab reports that the Second Life economy generated US$3,596,674 in economic activity during the month of September 2005,[37] and in September 2006 Second Life was reported to have a GDP of $64 million.[38] In 2009, the total size of the Second Life economy grew 65% to US$567 million, about 25% of the entire U.S. virtual goods market. Gross resident earnings are US$55 million in 2009 – 11% growth over 2008.[39] In 2013, Linden Labs released an info graphic that showed that over 10 years $3.2 billion in transactions for virtual goods had exchanged between Second Life residents, with an average of 1.2 million daily transactions.[40]

There is a high level of entrepreneurial activity in Second Life. Residents of Second Life are able to create virtual objects and other content. Second Life is unique in that users retain all the rights to their content which means they can use Second Life to distribute and sell their creations, with 2.1 million items listed on its online marketplace.[40] At its height circa 2006, hundreds of thousands of dollars were changing hands daily as residents created and sold a wide variety of virtual commodities. Second Life also quickly became profitable due to the selling and renting virtual real estate. 2006 also saw Second Life's first real-world millionaire; Ailin Graef, better known as Anshe Chung (her avatar), converted an initial investment of US$9.95 into over one million dollars over the course of two and a half years. She built her fortune primarily by buying, selling, and renting virtual real estate.[41]

Major tech corporations have tried to use Second Life to market products or services to Second Life's tech-savvy audience. IBM, for example, purchased 12 islands within Second Life for virtual training and simulations of key businesses processes, but has since moved on to other platforms due to maintaining costs.[42][43] Others, like musicians, podcasters, and news organizations (including CNET, Reuters, NPR's The Infinite Mind, and the BBC) have all had a presence within Second Life.[44]

Virtual goods include buildings, vehicles, devices of all kinds, animations, clothing, skin, hair, jewelry, flora and fauna, and works of art. Services include business management, entertainment, and custom content creation (which can be broken up into the following six categories: building, texturing, scripting, animating, art direction, and the position of producer/project funder). L$ can be purchased using US dollars and other local currencies on the LindeX exchange provided by Linden Lab. Customer USD wallets obtained from Linden Dollar sales on the Lindex are most commonly used to pay Second Life's own subscription and tier fees; only a relatively small number of users earn enough profit to request a refund to PayPal. According to figures published by Linden Lab, about 64,000 users made a profit in Second Life in February 2009, of whom 38,524 made less than US$10, while 233 made more than US$5000.[45] Profits are derived from selling virtual goods, renting land, and a broad range of services.

Technology[edit]

Second Life comprises the viewer (also known as the client) executing on the user's personal computer, and several thousand servers operated by Linden Lab.

Client[edit]

Linden Lab provides official viewers for Windows, macOS, and most distributions of Linux. The viewer renders 3D graphics using OpenGL technology. The viewer source code was released under the GPL in 2007[46][47] and moved to the LGPL in 2010.[48]

There are now several mature third party viewer projects that contain features not available in the Linden Lab 'Official' client, target other platforms or cater to specialist & accessibility needs.[49] The main focus of third party development is exploring new ideas and working with Linden Lab to deliver new functionality.[50]

An independent project, libopenmetaverse,[51] offers a function library for interacting with Second Life servers. libopenmetaverse has been used to create non-graphic third party viewers.

There are several Alternate Viewers published by Linden Lab used for software testing by volunteers for early access to upcoming projects.[52] Some of these clients only function on the 'beta grid' consisting of a limited number of regions running various releases of unstable test server code.

Server[edit]

Hair

Each full region (an area of 256×256 meters) in the Second Life 'grid' runs on a single dedicated core of a multi-core server. Homestead regions share 3 regions per core and Openspace Regions share 4 regions per core, running proprietary software on DebianLinux. These servers run scripts in the region, as well as providing communication between avatars and objects present in the region.

Every item in the Second Life universe is referred to as an asset. This includes the shapes of basic 3D polygon objects formally known as Primitive Mesh (commonly known as primatives or prims for short), the digital images referred to as textures that decorate primitives, digitized audio clips, avatar shape and appearance, avatar skin textures, LSL scripts, information written on notecards, and so on. Each asset is referenced with a universally unique identifier or UUID.[53]

Assets are stored on Isilon Systems storage clusters,[54] comprising all data that has ever been created by anyone who has been in the Second Life world. Infrequently used assets are offloaded to S3 bulk storage.[55] As of December 2007, the total storage was estimated to consume 100 terabytes of server capacity.[56] The asset servers function independently of the region simulators, though the region simulators request object data from the asset servers when a new object loads into the simulator.[citation needed] Region simulators areas are commonly known as sims by residents.

Each server instance runs a physics simulation to manage the collisions and interactions of all objects in that region. Objects can be nonphysical and non-moving, or actively physical and movable. Complex shapes may be linked together in groups of up to 256 separate primitives. Additionally, each player's avatar is treated as a physical object so that it may interact with physical objects in the world. As of 9 July 2014, Second Life simulators use the Havok 2011.2 physics engine for all in-world dynamics.[57] This engine is capable of simulating thousands of physical objects at once.[58]

Linden Lab pursues the use of open standards technologies, and uses free and open source software such as Apache, MySQL, Squid and Linux.[59] The plan is to move everything to open standards by standardizing the Second Life protocol. Cory Ondrejka, former CTO[60] of Second Life, stated in 2006 that a while after everything has been standardized, both the client and the server will be released as free and open source software.[61]

OpenSimulator[edit]

In January 2007, OpenSimulator was founded as an open-source simulator project. The aim of this project is to develop a full open-source server software for Second Life clients. OpenSIM is BSD Licensed and it is written in C# and can run under Mono environment. In 2008, there were some alternative grids[62] using OpenSimulator.

Applications[edit]

Arts[edit]

Second Life residents express themselves creatively through virtual world adaptations of art exhibits, live music,[63] live theater[64] and machinima,[65] as well as other art forms.

Competitive entertainment[edit]

A wide variety of recreational activities, both competitive and non-competitive, take place on the Second Life Grid, including both traditional sports and video game-like scenarios.

Education[edit]

Second Life is used as a platform for education by many institutions, such as colleges, universities, libraries and government entities. Since 2008, the University of San Martin de Porres of Peru[66] has been developing Second Life prototypes of Peruvian archeological buildings, and training teachers for this new paradigm of education. The West Virginia University (WVU) Department of Special Education has used Second Life widely in education, and it provided teaching certification and certificates of degree in seven different distance education programs.[67] WVU started a pilot program in the college's computer lab in spring 2011.

Embassies[edit]

Artists

The Maldives was the first country to open an embassy in Second Life.[68][69] The Maldives' embassy is located on Second Life's 'Diplomacy Island', where visitors will be able to talk face-to-face with a computer-generated ambassador about visas, trade and other issues. 'Diplomacy Island' also hosts Diplomatic Museum and Diplomatic Academy. The Island is established by DiploFoundation as part of the Virtual Diplomacy Project.[70]

In May 2007,[71]Sweden became the second country to open an embassy in Second Life. Run by the Swedish Institute, the embassy serves to promote Sweden's image and culture, rather than providing any real or virtual services.[72] The Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Carl Bildt, stated on his blog that he hoped he would get an invitation to the grand opening.[73]

In September 2007, Publicis Group announced the project of creating a Serbia island as a part of a project Serbia Under Construction. The project is officially supported by Ministry of Diaspora of Serbian Government. It was stated that the island will feature the Nikola Tesla Museum, the Guča Trumpet Festival and the Exit Festival.[74] It was also planned on opening a virtual info terminals of Ministry of Diaspora.[75]

On Tuesday December 4, 2007, Estonia became the third country to open an embassy in Second Life.[76][77] In September 2007, Colombia and Serbia opened embassies.[78] As of 2008, Macedonia and the Philippines have opened embassies in the 'Diplomatic Island' of Second Life.[79] In 2008, Albania opened an embassy in the Nova Bay location. SL Israel was inaugurated in January 2008 in an effort to showcase Israel to a global audience, though without any connection to official Israeli diplomatic channels.[80]

Malta and Djibouti are also planning to open virtual missions in Second Life.[81]

Religion[edit]

Religious organizations have also begun to open virtual meeting places within Second Life. In early 2007, LifeChurch.tv, a Christian church headquartered in Edmond, Oklahoma, and with eleven campuses in the US, created 'Experience Island' and opened its twelfth campus in Second Life.[82] The church reported 'We find that this creates a less-threatening environment where people are much more willing to explore and discuss spiritual things'.[citation needed] In July 2007, an Anglican cathedral[83] was established in Second Life; Mark Brown, the head of the group that built the cathedral, noted that there is 'an interest in what I call depth, and a moving away from light, fluffy Christianity'.[84]

The First Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Second Life was established in 2006. Services have been held regularly, making the FUUCSL Congregation one of the longest-running active congregations in Second Life.[85]

The Egyptian-owned news website Islam Online has purchased land in Second Life to allow Muslims and non-Muslims alike to perform the ritual of Hajj in virtual reality form, obtaining experience before actually making the pilgrimage to Mecca in person.[86]

Second Life also offers several groups that cater to the needs and interests of humanists, atheists, agnostics, and freethinkers. One of the most active groups is SL Humanism which has been holding weekly discussion meetings inside Second Life every Sunday since 2006.[87]

Relationships[edit]

Relationships are common in Second Life, including some couples who have married online.[88] The social engagement offered by the online environment helps those who might be socially isolated. In addition, sex is often encountered.[89] However, to access the adult sections requires age verification.[90] There is also a large BDSM community.[91]

Second Life relationships have been taken from virtual online relationships into personal, real-world relationships. Booperkit Moseley and Shukran Fahid were possibly the first couple to meet in Second Life and then marry in real life. Booperkit travelled to the United States to meet Shukran and he returned to England with her after one week. They married in 2006, had twin boys in 2009, and are still married. Some couples meet online, form friendships, and eventually move to finding one another in the real world.[citation needed] Some even have their weddings on Second Life, as well as in a real-world setting.[92]

Relationships in virtual worlds have an added dimension compared to other social media, because avatars give a feeling of proximity making the voyeur experience more intense than simply a textual encounter. The complexities of those encounters depend on the engagement levels of the people behind the avatars, whether they are engaging Disassociatively (entertainment only), Immersively (as if the avatar was them), or Augmentatively (meaning they engage for a real-life purpose).[93]

Science[edit]

Second Life is used for scientific research, collaboration, and data visualization.[94] Examples include SciLands, American Chemical Society's ACS Island, Genome, Virginia Tech's SLATE, and Nature Publishing Group's Elucian Islands Village.

Social network[edit]

Second Life can be a real-time, immersive social space for people including those with physical or mental disabilities that impair their first lives, who often find comfort and security interacting through anonymous avatars. (Indeed, some academics believe using Second Life might even help improve motor ability for people with Parkinson’s disease.).[95] An example of how Second Life has been used by disabled people is Wheelies, the widely publicised disability themed nightclub founded by Simon Stevens.

Music streams[edit]

ShoutCast and Icecast Internet radio stations can be streamed into a land parcel in Second Life. Streaming codecs are currently MP3 as AAC and OGG are not currently supported. There are internet radio providers that offer these services or select from a list compiled by Lindal Kidd and is updated whenever by whoever as there's no officiant for it. At the time of this writing, media on a prim(MOAP) is not a reliable enough way of displaying media and such, sites listed work best with Parcel Media or Parcel Audio.

Work solutions[edit]

Second Life gives companies the option to create virtual workplaces to allow employees to virtually meet, hold events, practice any kind of corporate communications, conduct training sessions in 3D immersive virtual learning environment, simulate business processes, and prototype new products.

Criticism and controversy[edit]

Second Life has seen a number of controversies, as well. Issues range from the technical (budgeting of server resources), to moral (pornography), to legal (legal position of the Linden Dollar, Bragg v. Linden Lab). Security issues have also been a concern.

Regulation[edit]

In the past, large portions of the Second Life economy consisted of businesses that are regulated or banned. Changes to Second Life's Terms of Service in this regard have largely had the purpose of bringing activity within Second Life into compliance with various international laws, even though the person running the business may be in full compliance with the law in their own country.

On July 26, 2007, Linden Lab announced a ban on in-world gambling due to federal and state regulations on Internet gambling that could affect Linden Lab if it was permitted to continue. The ban was immediately met with in-world protests.[96]

In August 2007, a $750,000 in-world Linden Dollar bank called Ginko Financial collapsed due to a bank run triggered by Linden Lab's ban on gambling,[citation needed] which halved the size of the Second Life economy.[citation needed] The aftershocks of this collapse caused severe liquidity problems for other virtual 'Linden Dollar banks', which critics had long asserted were scams. On Tuesday, January 8, 2008 Linden Lab announced the upcoming prohibition of payment of fixed interest on cash deposits in unregulated banking activities in-world.[97] All banks without real-world charters closed or converted to virtual joint stock companies by January 22, 2008.[98] After the ban, a few companies continue to offer non-interest bearing deposit accounts to residents, such as the e-commerce site XStreet, which had already adopted a zero-interest policy 3 months before the Linden Lab interest ban.

Technical issues[edit]

Second Life has suffered from difficulties related to system instability. These include increased system latency, and intermittent client crashes. However, some faults are caused by the system's use of an 'asset server' cluster, on which the actual data governing objects is stored separately from the areas of the world and the avatars that use those objects. The communication between the main servers and the asset cluster appears to constitute a bottleneck which frequently causes problems.[99][100][101] Typically, when asset server downtime is announced, users are advised not to build, manipulate objects, or engage in business, leaving them with little to do but chat and generally reducing confidence in all businesses on the grid.

Another problem is inventory loss,[102][103][104] in which items in a user's inventory, including those which have been paid for, can disappear without warning or permanently enter a state where they will fail to appear in-world when requested (giving an 'object missing from database' error). Linden Lab offers no compensation for items that are lost in this way, although a policy change instituted in 2008 allows accounts to file support tickets when inventory loss occurs. Many in-world businesses will attempt to compensate for this or restore items, although they are under no obligation to do so and not all are able to do so. A recent change in how the company handles items which have 'lost their parent directory' means that inventory loss is much less of a problem and resolves faster than in recent years. 'Loss to recovery times' have gone from months (or never) to hours or a day or two for the majority of users, but inventory loss does still exist.

Second Life functions by streaming all data to the user live over the Internet with minimal local caching of frequently used data. The user is expected to have a minimum of 300kbit/s of Internet bandwidth for basic functionality. Due to the proprietary communications protocols, it is not possible to use a network proxy service to reduce network load when many people are all using the same location, such as when used for group activities in a school or business.

Fraud and intellectual property protection[edit]

Although Second Life's client and server incorporate digital rights management technology, the visual data of an object must ultimately be sent to the client in order for it to be drawn; thus unofficial third-party clients can bypass them. One such program, CopyBot, was developed in 2006 as a debugging tool to enable objects to be backed up, but was immediately hijacked for use in copying objects; additionally, programs that generally attack client-side processing of data, such as GLIntercept, can copy certain pieces of data. Such use is prohibited under the Second Life TOS[105] and could be prosecuted under the DMCA.

Linden Lab may ban a user who is observed using CopyBot or a similar client, but it will not ban a user simply for uploading or even selling copied content; in this case, Linden Lab's enforcement of intellectual property law is limited to that required by the 'safe harbor' provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which requires filing a real-life lawsuit. Although a few high-profile businesses in Second Life have filed such lawsuits,[106][107][108][109][110] none of the cases filed to date have gone to trial, and most have been dismissed pursuant to a settlement agreement reached between the parties.[111][112][113] Overall, the majority of businesses in Second Life do not make enough money for a lawsuit to be worthwhile, or due to real-life work commitments, they cannot devote enough time to complete one. As a result, many Second Life businesses and their intellectual property remains effectively unprotected. Another case where settlement and dismissal was gained may be found in the matter of Eros, LLC v. Linden Research, Inc. As of October 7, 2010, the case was transferred to private mediation and the plaintiffs filed for dismissal of charges on March 15, 2011.[114]

There have also been issues with the use of false DMCA takedown notices.[115] Once a DMCA takedown notice is served, reversing it requires an individual to expose his personal information to the filer (filing a notice does not require this); for the penalty of perjury to be enacted, a lawsuit is required (anything less, the false DMCA claimer can just claim it from a different account every week causing legitimate business unlimited losses). In addition, the technical process of removal and re-instatement of content on Second Life is subject to failure which can result in content becoming unusable to its owner. This does not effectively prevent content theft; a thief who is subject to a DMCA takedown notice will not challenge it, but will simply create a new account and re-upload the content, often releasing it with all permissions available to maximize propagation out of spite.

Most users in the world as paying, private individuals are, likewise, effectively unprotected. Common forms of fraud taking place in-world include bogus investment and pyramid schemes, fake or hacked vendors, and failure to honor land rental agreements.A group of virtual landowners online have filed a class action lawsuit against the company, claiming the company broke the law when it rescinded their ownership rights. The plaintiffs say a change in the terms of service forced them to either accept new terms that rescinded their virtual property ownership rights, or else be locked out of the site.[116]

The Emerald client and in-world logging scripts[edit]

The Emerald client was developed by a group of users based on an open-source branch of the Snowglobe viewer. Several groups alleged that the Emerald viewer contained Trojan code which tracked user details and demographics in a way that the developers could later recover (via in-world logging scripts), one of these groups was banned from Second Life by Linden Lab after publishing their discovery.[117] Shortly afterward, it was discovered that one of the members of the Emerald team had attempted to use the viewer to (allegedly) DDOS another website. In response, Linden Lab revoked Emerald's third-party viewer approval and permanently banned several of Emerald's developers. Due to what happened with Emerald, Linden Lab instituted a new third-party viewer policy [118]The support staff and a developer (the main developers left Second Life development/were barred from further development) of the Emerald project left to work on a new viewer project, Phoenix (simply a rebranded Emerald), that did not contain any malicious code. The Phoenix team are now the developers behind Firestorm Viewer and work closely alongside Linden Lab, holding bi-weekly joint meetings with all third party viewers.[119]

Ban of Woodbury University[edit]

The controversial campus of Woodbury University's School of Media, Culture and Design, which was deleted in 2010 by Linden Lab

Linden Lab has twice, in 2007 and 2010, banned a California educational institution, Woodbury University, from having a representation within Second Life. On April 20, 2010, four simulators belonging to the university were deleted and the accounts of several students and professors terminated, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. Professor Edward Clift, Dean of the School of Media, Culture and Design at Woodbury University, told The Chronicle of Higher Education that their campus 'was a living, breathing campus in Second Life', including educational spaces designed mostly by students, such as a mock representation of the former Soviet Union and a replica of the Berlin Wall. According to Professor Clift, the virtual campus did not 'conform to what Linden Lab wanted a campus to be.'[120][121][122]

The Aluminium body machines were made in Black/Gold, Beige or Beige/Brown. Serial It also had a price tag to match.!The Singer 201K was cast iron in Black with a round neck body, also made with an Aluminium body which had a square neck.

The article in The Chronicle of Higher Education concluded with: 'Meanwhile, many people in Second Life expressed on blogs that they were glad to see the virtual campus go, arguing that it had been a haven for troublemakers in the virtual world.'[121]

The Alphaville Herald[edit]

In 2004, the newspaper The Alphaville Herald, founded and edited by the philosopher Peter Ludlow, migrated to Second Life, and in the following years the newspaper played a prominent role in reporting on Second Life and in the public discussion of the game.[123] The newspaper, which was known as The Second Life Herald from 2004 to 2009, was later edited by the Internet pioneer Mark P. McCahill. According to scholars Constantinescu and Decu, The Alphaville Herald was the first 'virtual free press,' pioneering mass communication in virtual worlds.[124]

In popular culture[edit]

Since its debut in 2003, Second Life has been referred to by various popular culture mediums, including literature, television, film and music. In addition, various personalities in such mediums have themselves used or employed Second Life for both their own works and for private purposes.

Sims

In September 2006, former Governor of VirginiaMark Warner became the first politician to appear in a MMO when he gave a speech in Second Life.[125] Musicians followed suit, with Redzone being credited by Wired and Reuters as the first band to tour in Second Life in February 2007. Then, in June 2008, author Charles Stross held a conference in Second Life to promote an upcoming novel.[126]Second Life was also featured prominently, and used as a tool to locate a suspect, in the television show CSI: NY in 2007.[127] In the American sitcom The Office, Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) is known to play the game, most notably in the episode ”Local Ad“.

Research[edit]

Much of the published research conducted in Second Life is associated with education and learning. Unlike computer games, Second Life does not have a pre-defined purpose and allows for highly realistic enactment of real life activities online.[128] One such study tested the usefuleness of SL as an action learning environment in a senior course for management information systems students.[128] Another presented a case study in which university students were tasked with building an interactive learning experience using SL as a platform. Both problem-based learning and constructionism acted as framing pedagogies for the task, with students working in teams to design and build a learning experience which could be possible in real life.[129]

Situated learning has also been examined in SL, in order to determine how the design and social dynamics of the virtual world support as well as constrain various types of learning.[130] The paper, 'The future for (second) life and learning', published in the British Journal of Educational Technology, examines the potential of Second Life to further innovative learning techniques.[131] It notes trends within the SL innovation to date, including the provision of realistic settings, the exploitation of pleasant simulated environments for groups, and the links with other learning technologies. It also considers the creativity sparked by SL's potential to offer the illusion of 3-D ‘spaces’ and buildings, and points to infinite imaginative educational possibilities.[131]

HealthInfo Island provides tips on staying healthy to Second Life residents.

Healthinfo Island offers Second Life residents tips on how to stay healthy.

Second Life has also offered educational research potential within the medical and healthcare fields. Examples include in-world research facilities such as the Second Life Medical and Consumer Health Libraries (Healthinfo Island—funded by a grant from the US National Library of Medicine), and VNEC (Virtual Neurological Education Centre—developed at the University of Plymouth, UK).[132]

There have also been healthcare related studies done of SL residents.[133] Studies show that behaviors from virtual worlds can translate to the real world. One survey suggests that users are engaged in a range of health-related activities in SL which are potentially impacting real-life behaviors.[133]

Another focus of SL research has included the relationship of avatars or virtual personas to the 'real' or actual person. These studies have included research into social behavior and reported two main implications.[134] The first is that SL virtual selves shape users' offline attitudes and behavior. The research indicated that virtual lives and physical lives are not independent, and our appearances and actions have both online and offline consequences.[134] The second deals with experimental research and supports the idea that virtual environments, such as SL, can enable research programs in that people behave in a relatively natural spread of behavioral patterns.[134]

The SL avatar-self relationship was also studied via resident interviews, and various enactments of the avatar-self relationship were identified. The study concluded that SL residents enacted multiple avatar-self relationships and cycled through them in quick succession, suggesting that these avatar-self relationships might be shaped and activated strategically in order to achieve the desired educational, commercial, or therapeutic outcomes.[135]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Infographic: 10 Years of Second Life'. Linden Lab. June 20, 2013. Retrieved August 4, 2014.
  2. ^'Returning to Second Life'. Ars Technica. October 23, 2017. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  3. ^'If Second Life isn't a game, what is it? – Technology & science – Games – On the Level'. NBC News. December 3, 2007. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  4. ^'Download the free Second Life viewer'. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  5. ^'Third Party Viewer Directory – Second Life Wiki'. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  6. ^'Second Life turns 10: what it did wrong, and why it may have its own second life'. June 23, 2013. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  7. ^ ab'Terms of Service – Linden Lab'.
  8. ^'Teens in Second Life'. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  9. ^'ReachWorks SecureVend Makes Second Life DRM: Can It Stop Content Theft?'. Law Vibe. Retrieved September 5, 2015.
  10. ^'SecureVend™'. ReachWorks. Archived from the original on November 6, 2015. Retrieved September 5, 2015.
  11. ^'Terms of Service'. Linden Lab. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  12. ^Au, Wagner James (September 26, 2013). 'Renderosity Bans Its Products from Second Life – Concern Over Linden Lab's New Draconian ToS Continues'. Retrieved October 2, 2013.
  13. ^Au, Wagner James. The Making of Second Life, pg. 19. New York: Collins. ISBN978-0-06-135320-8.
  14. ^Linden Lab (February 11, 2002). 'Linden Lab Debuts, Company Dedicated to 3D Entertainment'. Archived from the original on July 19, 2009. Retrieved June 10, 2009.
  15. ^Linden Lab (October 30, 2002). 'Linden Lab Announces Name of New Online World 'Second Life' And Availability of Beta Program'. Archived from the original on July 18, 2009. Retrieved June 10, 2009.
  16. ^Dubner, Stephen (December 13, 2007). 'Philip Rosedale Answers Your Questions'. New York Times. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  17. ^'My Virtual Life'. Business Week. May 1, 2006. Archived from the original on January 5, 2007. Retrieved January 5, 2007.
  18. ^'UPDATED] Was Cory Linden fired, or did he quit?'. Massively. December 13, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  19. ^the-second-life-economy—first-quarter-2009-in-detail. For the latest data, visit economy_stats, from which the quoted numbers were taken.
  20. ^Philip Rosedale. 'Changing my Job'.
  21. ^Wagner, Mitch (April 22, 2008). 'Second Life Gets New CEO'. InformationWeek Business Technology Network. Retrieved November 6, 2009.
  22. ^Hoge, Patrick (October 20, 2010). 'Interim Linden Lab CEO steps down'.
  23. ^'Emmy Online'. Emmyonline.tv. Archived from the original on September 21, 2010. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  24. ^Pathak, Nilakshi (July 29, 2017). 'Second Life – Create your Virtual World with your Imagined Stories'.
  25. ^Tateru Nino (September 8, 2009). 'Second Life median concurrency declines as bots/campers progressively purged'. AOL Inc. Retrieved August 24, 2015.
  26. ^''Second Life' Owner Linden Lab to Lay Off 30% of Its Workers'. AOL Inc. Retrieved March 22, 2011.
  27. ^'Current user metrics for Second Life'. Secondlife.com. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  28. ^''Now With 300K Members, Second Life's Facebook Page is By Far SL's Largest Social Media Presence''. Retrieved April 19, 2013.
  29. ^'Why Is 'Second Life' Still a Thing? – Motherboard'. Motherboard. April 29, 2016. Retrieved March 4, 2017.
  30. ^YouTube (November 22, 2006). 'The Origin of Second Life and its Relation to Real Life'. YouTube. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  31. ^'Glimpse inside a metaverse: the virtual world of Second Life'. Retrieved August 11, 2014.
  32. ^'Linden Lab Official:Teens in Second Life – Second Life Wiki'. Wiki.secondlife.com. February 8, 2012. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  33. ^'Alt Account FAQ'. Linden Research. Retrieved September 2, 2010.
  34. ^'Second Life Avatars and their Real Life'. Web Urbanist. June 17, 2007. Retrieved June 18, 2007.
  35. ^'LlEmail – Second Life Wiki'. Wiki.secondlife.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  36. ^Anna Peachey (2011). Peachey, Anna; Childs, Mark (eds.). Reinventing ourselves : contemporary concepts of identity in virtual worlds. London: Springer. p. 2. ISBN978-085729-360-2. Retrieved December 5, 2013.
  37. ^Reiss, Spencer (December 2005 – January 2006). 'Virtual Economics'. Retrieved November 24, 2006.
  38. ^Newitz, Annalee (September 2006). 'Your Second Life Is Ready'. Popular Science. Archived from the original on November 16, 2006. Retrieved November 24, 2006.
  39. ^'Second Life economy totals $567 million US dollars in 2009 — 65% growth over 2008'. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  40. ^ ab'Infographic: 10 Years of Second Life'. June 20, 2013. Retrieved August 5, 2014.
  41. ^Wagner J. Au (March 24, 2009). 'Top Second Life Entrepreneur Cashing Out US$1.7 Million Yearly; Furnishings, Events Management Among Top Earners'. Retrieved March 30, 2009.
  42. ^'Costly mistake'. Hypergrid Business. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
  43. ^'IBM dives into Second Life'. IBM developerWorks. January 19, 2010. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
  44. ^'What is Second Life? - Definition from WhatIs.com'. Whatis.techtarget.com. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  45. ^'Second Life Economic Data'. Secondlife.com. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  46. ^'Linden Lab To Open Source Second Life Software'. Linden Lab. January 8, 2007. Archived from the original on March 4, 2008. Retrieved January 8, 2007.
  47. ^Phoenix Linden (January 8, 2007). 'Embracing the Inevitable'. Linden Lab. Retrieved January 8, 2007.
  48. ^Oz Linden (July 9, 2007). 'What Does the LGPL Mean for Second Life Viewers?'. Linden Lab. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  49. ^Oz Linden (August 11, 2013). 'Third Party Viewer Directory'. Linden Lab. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
  50. ^Oz Linden (August 16, 2012). 'Open Source Project Improve Graphics Rendering'. Linden Lab. Retrieved November 8, 2013.
  51. ^'libopenmetaverse'. libopenmetaverse.org. Archived from the original on April 6, 2009. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  52. ^Oz Linden. 'Alternate Viewers'. Linden Lab.
  53. ^'Key'. Linden Lab. August 25, 2007. Retrieved October 1, 2007.
  54. ^Ambrose, Frank (January 12, 2009). 'Second Life Grid Update from FJ Linden'. Retrieved January 20, 2009.
  55. ^Ambrose, Frank (March 4, 2009). 'The State of the Grid'. Retrieved March 4, 2009.
  56. ^Rosedale, Philip (December 13, 2007). 'Philip Rosedale Answers Your Second Life Questions'. The New York Times. Retrieved December 18, 2007.
  57. ^'Release Notes/Second Life Server/11'. Linden Lab. September 2011. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  58. ^'Second Life Havok 4 – no lag with 2000–3400 physical prims'. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  59. ^Greenemeier, Larry (October 17, 2005). 'Open Doors To Innovation'. InformationWeek. Retrieved November 14, 2006.
  60. ^Konrad, Rachel (December 12, 2007). 'Second Life CTO Resigns'. The Boston Globe.
  61. ^'LugRadio Episode 42—I'm an excellent driver'. LugRadio. January 16, 2006. Retrieved November 24, 2006.
  62. ^'SL Hungary: Links / All Links'. En.slhungary.hu. Archived from the original on February 20, 2008. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  63. ^'Second Life Musicians'. songularity.org. Archived from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved October 19, 2012.
  64. ^'Samandiriel'.
  65. ^'The 48 Hour Film Project Machinima'. 48HFP. Retrieved January 23, 2015.
  66. ^'usmpvirtual.edu.pe'. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  67. ^Hartley, Melissa D.; Ludlow, Barbara L.; Duff, Michael C. (2015). 'Second Life®: A 3D virtual immersive environment for teacher preparation courses in a distance education program'. Journal. 34 (3): 21–25. doi:10.1177/875687051503400305.
  68. ^'Yahoo!'. www.secondlifeinsider.com.
  69. ^'Tiny island nation opens the first real embassy in virtual world'The Times Online
  70. ^'Diplomacy Island in Second Life'Archived November 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Diplomatic Quarter, Virtual Diplomatic Academy, Internet Governance Village
  71. ^'SecondLife Insider confirmed'. Secondlifeinsider.com. May 22, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  72. ^Agence France-Presse (January 26, 2007). 'Sweden to set up embassy in Second Life'. Sweden.se.
  73. ^Carl Bildt (January 30, 2007). 'Carl Bildt: Heja Olle Wästberg!'. Retrieved February 13, 2007.
  74. ^'Serbia Is Entering Second Life'. Metaverse.acidzen.org. Archived from the original on July 24, 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  75. ^'Serbia Enters Second Life Second Life Update'. Secondlifeupdate.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  76. ^'Estonian SL Embassy News: It Is Open!'. Saatkond.typepad.com. December 4, 2007. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  77. ^'SLurl: Location-Based Linking in Second Life'. Slurl.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  78. ^'SERBIA has big plans for Second Life'. Aibo.typepad.com. November 20, 2007. Archived from the original on June 29, 2012. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  79. ^'The Maldives Virtual Embassy'. Secondlifeinsider.com. May 22, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  80. ^'Second Life Israel, The Jerusalem Post'. Archived from the original on July 8, 2012.
  81. ^'Diplomacy Island in Second Life, Diplomatic Quarter, Virtual Diplomatic Academy, Internet Governance Village'. Archived from the original on November 7, 2009.
  82. ^'Give me that online religion'. MSNBC. May 21, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  83. ^'The Anglican Church in Second Life'. Slangcath.wordpress.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  84. ^Lopez, Miguel (June 19, 2007). 'Anglican Second Life Inhabitants Construct Medieval Cathedral'. Blog.wired.com. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  85. ^First UU Congregation of Second Life. Fuucsl.org. Retrieved on 2013-09-21.
  86. ^'Second Life Visit To Mecca for the Hajj Sky News Technology'. News.sky.com. Retrieved March 8, 2009.
  87. ^'The SL Humanism Group'. October 28, 2007.
  88. ^'Virtual world, real emotions: Relationships in Second Life'. CNN iReport. December 15, 2008. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
  89. ^Wagner, Mitch (May 26, 2007). 'Sex in Second Life'. InformationWeek. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
  90. ^'Maturity Ratings – Second Life'. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
  91. ^Welles, Destiny (January 23, 2007). 'BDSM blossoms in Second Life'. The Register. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
  92. ^'Virtual World, real emotions: Relationships in Second Life'. CNN Living. March 12, 2007. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved May 7, 2012.
  93. ^Clift, Pamala, ″Virgin′s Handbook on Virtual Relationships″, Chapt.6, 2012 (CreateSpace)ISBN1463666993
  94. ^'Chemistry in Second Life'. Journal.chemistrycentral.com. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
  95. ^'Second Life turns 10: what it did wrong, and why it may have its own second life — Tech News and Analysis'. Gigaom.com. June 23, 2013. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  96. ^'Gambling Banned in Second Life'. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
  97. ^'Banking Banned in Second Life'.
  98. ^Sidel, Robin (January 23, 2008). 'Cheer Up, Ben: Your Economy Isn't As Bad as This One. In the Make-Believe World Of 'Second Life,' Banks Are Really Collapsing'. Wall Street Journal.
  99. ^Tateru Nino (January 6, 2008). 'Second Life grid closed due to asset problems – Massively'. Massively.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  100. ^'RESOLVED] Asset Server Issues « Official Second Life Blog'. Blog.secondlife.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  101. ^Eloise PasteurFiled under: LSL, Gridbugs (June 12, 2007). 'Asset server issues – Second Life Insider'. Secondlifeinsider.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  102. ^'UPDATED] Experiencing inventory loss? Read on.. « Official Second Life Blog'. Blog.secondlife.com. Archived from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  103. ^'Inventory Loss Reduction Initiative « Official Second Life Blog'. Blog.secondlife.com. Archived from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  104. ^'#SVC-114] Meta-Issue: Inventory Loss: issues, fixes, development – Second Life Issues'. Jira.secondlife.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  105. ^'Use of CopyBot and Similar Tools a ToS Violation'. Linden Lab. November 14, 2006. Retrieved September 9, 2007.
  106. ^Kathleen Craig (May 18, 2006). 'Second Life Land Deal Goes Sour'. Wired.com. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  107. ^Eric Reuters (July 3, 2007). 'SL business sues for copyright infringement'. Reuters.com. Archived from the original on July 7, 2007. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  108. ^Urmee Khan (November 25, 2008). 'Second Life lawsuit to test how much jurisdiction courts have over virtual world'. London: Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  109. ^Erik Larson (April 20, 2009). 'Taser Sues Second Life Virtual World Creator Over Gun Sales'. Bloomberg.com. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  110. ^Kashmir Hill (September 18, 2009). 'Lawsuit of the Day: Getting Off on Knock-off Virtual Sex Toys'. Abovethelaw.com. Archived from the original on September 23, 2009. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  111. ^Benjamin Duranske (October 4, 2007). 'Bragg v. Linden Lab – Confidential Settlement Reached; 'Marc Woebegone' Back in Second Life'. Virtuallyblind.com. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  112. ^Benjamin Duranske (December 3, 2007). 'Second Life Content Creators' Lawsuit Against Thomas Simon (aka Avatar 'Rase Kenzo') Settles; Signed Consent Judgement Filed'. Virtuallyblind.com. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  113. ^Tateru Nino (May 6, 2009). 'Taser International vs Linden Lab: Lawsuit dropped!'. Massively.com. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  114. ^'Eros v. Linden Update'. 3d Internet Law. January 30, 2010. Retrieved March 14, 2010.
  115. ^'~*Fresh Baked Goods*~: Sweet Justice..?'. Slfreshbakedgoods.blogspot.com. September 10, 2008. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  116. ^'Class Action Lawsuit Targets Second Life'. CNET. May 3, 2010. Retrieved May 4, 2010.
  117. ^Jennings, Scott (August 24, 2010). 'The Client Is in the Compiler of the Enemy'. Broken Toys. Archived from the original on August 10, 2013. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
  118. ^'Policy on Third-Party Viewers – Second Life'.
  119. ^'Is Linden Lab abandoning Second Life? –'.
  120. ^Andrea L. Foster (July 13, 2007). 'The Death of a Virtual Campus'(PDF). The Chronicle of Higher Education. Archived from the original on May 4, 2016. Retrieved May 4, 2016.
  121. ^ abJeff Young (April 21, 2010). 'Woodbury U. Banned From Second Life, Again'. The Chronicle of Higher Education. Archived from the original on October 8, 2012. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  122. ^Jeff Greer (April 22, 2010). 'California College Loses Second Life for a Second Time'. U.S. News & World Report. Archived from the original on October 18, 2012. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  123. ^Peter Ludlow and Mark Wallace, The Second Life Herald: The Virtual Tabloid that Witnessed the Dawn of the Metaverse, MIT Press, 2007, ISBN978-0-262-12294-8
  124. ^Constantinescu, Diana and Decu, Andrei, 'Social Cooperation within Virtual Worlds: Old Social Phenomena Emerging in New Environments' (October 1, 2008). doi:10.2139/ssrn.2000872
  125. ^'Former governor speaks in Second Life'. Joystiq.com. September 1, 2006.
  126. ^'Charlie Stross in Second Life this Saturday'. BoingBoing. 2008.
  127. ^Carter, Bill (October 4, 2007). 'Fictional Characters Get Virtual Lives, Too'. The New York Times.
  128. ^ abWagner, C. (2009). 'Action Learning with Second Life – A Pilot Study'. Journal of Information Systems Education. 20 (2): 249–258.
  129. ^Good, J.; Howland, K.; Thackray, L. (2008). 'Problem-based learning spanning real and virtual words: a case study in Second Life'. Association for Learning Technology Journal. 16 (3): 163–172. doi:10.1080/09687760802526681.
  130. ^Hayes, E.R. (May 2006). 'Situated learning in virtual worlds: The learning ecology of Second Life'(PDF). In AERC Conference Proceedings: 154–159. Archived from the original(PDF) on October 14, 2014.
  131. ^ abSalmon, G. (2009). 'The future for (second) life and learning'(PDF). British Journal of Educational Technology. 40 (3): 154–159. Archived from the original(PDF) on October 14, 2014.
  132. ^Boulos, M.N.K.; Hetherington, L.; Wheeler, S. (2007). 'Second Life: an overview of the potential of 3‐D virtual worlds in medical and health education'. Health Information & Libraries Journal. 24 (4): 233–245. doi:10.1111/j.1471-1842.2007.00733.x. PMID18005298.
  133. ^ abBeard, L.; Wilson, K.; Morra, D.; Keelan, J. (2009). 'A survey of health-related activities on second life'. Journal of Medical Internet Research. 11 (2): e17. doi:10.2196/jmir.1192. PMC2762804. PMID19632971.
  134. ^ abcHarris, H.; Bailenson, J.N.; Nielsen, A.; Yee, N. (2009). 'The evolution of social behavior over time in second life'. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments. 18 (6): 434–448. CiteSeerX10.1.1.363.6225. doi:10.1162/pres.18.6.434.
  135. ^Schultze, U.; Leahy, M.N. (January 2009). 'The avatar-self relationship: enacting presence in second life'. Icis 2009 Proceedings.

Further reading[edit]

  • Hillis, Ken. (2009) Online A Lot of the Time. Durham: Duke University Press (see Chapter 4).0
  • Kaplan Andreas M., Haenlein M. (2009) Consumer use and business potential of virtual worlds: The case of Second Life, International Journal on Media Management, 11(3).
  • Kaplan Andreas M., Haenlein M. (2009) The fairyland of Second Life: About virtual social worlds and how to use them, Business Horizons, 52(6).
  • Olsen, Per; Li Gang, Qin (2011). Second Life Love. A dialog between two partners in Second Life. New York: Lulu Press.
  • Martin, Neo; Second Life Fraud. Fraud and intellectual property protection in Second Life. New York: Public Journal
  • Robbins, Sarah, and Mark R. Bell. Second Life for Dummies. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley Pub., 2008. Print.
  • Rymaszewski, Michael. Second Life The Official Guide. Sybex Inc, 2008. Print.
  • Zerzan, John. Telos 141, Second-Best Life: Real Virtuality. New York: Telos Press Ltd., Winter 2007.
  • SK Alamgir Hossain, Abu Saleh Md Mahfujur Rahman, and Abdulmotaleb El Saddik, 'Interpersonal haptic communication in second life', in Haptic Audio-Visual Environments and Games (HAVE), 2010 IEEE International Symposium on, October 16–17, 2010, Phoenix, Arizona, USA, pp. 1 –4.
  • Taşçı, D., Dinçer, D. 'The Creation Of Academic Consulting Environment in Virtual Worlds And An Assessment Of Challenges Faced By Learners in This Environment', Conference proceedings of 'eLearning and Software for Education', 01, 2011, p. 290–296.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Second_Life&oldid=906850791'
Starting a plea thread for developers to give us a prestige funeral with custom animations. Maybe a funeral home / graveyard combo lot where you can pick out a casket?
I'd love to let my elders go somewhere and plan their own funeral. Buy a plot or choose cremation. Buy a funeral package.
I'd like funeral activities to include mourning, eulogies, food, and some graveside service that ends with a new marker/gravesite/or cremation plaque. You could use the comedy mic or podium for eulogies. Types of eulogies (comic eulogy, heartfelt eulogy, angry rant eulogy, insult eulogy) could give the attendees moodlets. Maybe even cause fights!
Maybe you could set a custom mourning color for clothes, since not every culture considers black the mourning color.
When we have weather, maybe it always rains during funerals.
Neighbors should randomly bring food to your home for a few days after a death and give condolences.
And we need actual tombs or grave plots. I am constantly creating 1x2 or 1x3 platforms/decks or spray painting dirt piles with the terrain tools to make graves realistic. And funeral-specific wreaths and flowers. I am always hanging Christmas wreaths at funerals and pretending they aren't Christmas wreaths.
Other ideas?
J