Podcating State of Play
PodTech Network will be podcasting the State of Play event this week.
OCTOBER, 6TH
7:00 - 10:00PM
"Workshop Dinner" and Reporting from the Front Panel
Reporting from the Front asks leading virtual world reporters about the challenges, especially the legal challenges of reporting from the new frontier. Is virtual world journalism even a field? Do off-line privileges apply to the on-line world? Can a source be both anonymous and virtual? Is there a cyber-prison for reporters who refuse to disclose their confidential sources? What impact has the “new games journalism” movement had on virtual world reporting?
Panel:
James Au, New World Notes
Julian Dibbell, Wired
Cam Stracher, New York Law School (Co-Moderator)
Daniel Terdiman, CNET
Clive Thompson, New York Times Magazine
Rebecca MacKinnon, Berkman Center of Internet and Society (Co-Moderator)
Mark Wallace, Freelance Journalist
Friday, OCTOBER, 7TH
8:00 - 9:30AM
Breakfast and Stock Markets in Virtual Worlds Panel
This special session will look at the financial speculation and experimentation going on in virtual worlds. From player-created in-world stock exchanges to public companies engaging in virtual real estate speculation, virtual worlds are home to a raft of new financial schemes and opportunities. This panel examines the rise of virtual securities. Can an exchange flourish without enforcement?
Panel:
Caroline Bradley, University of Miami - Law
Ted Castronova, Indiana Unviersity
Michael Einhorn, Consor
Kjartan Pierre Emilsson, CCP Game Design
Faith Kahn, New York Law School (Moderator)
Philip Rosedale, Linden Lab
10AM - 3:00PM Design Workshops - By Invitation |
6:00PM - 10:00PM
State of Play Dinner Panel
Crucial to understanding the future of cyberspace is the chance to hear from the builders of the metaverse. At the State of Play dinner each year, virtual worlds journalist Julian Dibbell interviews leading game designers about the technology and its likely evolution
Panel:
Cory Ondrejka, Second Life
Julian Dibbell, Wired (Moderator)
Kjartan Pierre Emilsson, CCP Game Designer
Jessica Mulligan, Consultant / Executive Producer Nevrax
10:00PM - ?
Mini-Machinima Film Festival
Hosted by Paul Marino
And
Dance, Dance Revolution Extravaganza
Saturday, October 8th
8:00 - 9:45AM
State of the Industry Breakfast
The annual State of the Industry breakfast asks virtual world company executives to talk about the year’s developments in the industry and what they view as the most challenging and urgent legal problems for virtual worlds on the horizon.
Panel:
Jim Rosini, Kenyon & Kenyon (Moderator)
Scott Foe, Nokia
William Leverett, NCSoft
Steve Salyer, IGE
Michael Wilson, There.com
10:00 - 11:30AM
Law in Virtual Worlds
After two State of Play conferences where we first identified the rise of “virtual world law,” it has finally happened. A triumverate of legal cases with direct and far-reaching implications for the design of and creativity within virtual worlds happened this year. This panel of virtual world law experts looks at Grokster, Brand X and the Marvel Comics litigation from the perspective of massively multiplayer on-line games and their future. This session addresses not only what will be the effect on virtual worlds as we know them now but how these cases are likely to impact the way the metaverse evolves.
Panel:
Ann Bartow, University of South Carolina - Law
Greg Boyd, Kenyon & Kenyon
Susan Crawford, Cardozo Law School
Terry Fisher, Harvard, Berkman Center for Internet & Society (Moderator)
Greg Lastowka, Rutgers School of Law
Charlie Nesson, Harvard, Berkman Center for Internet & Society
John Palfrey, Harvard, Berkman Center for Internet & Society
Andy Zaffron, Sony Online Entertainment
11:30 - 1:45PM
The Great Debate
Is thinking about virtual worlds as distinct legal realms a misguided form of utopianism? Or do we need a transnational approach to make sense of the distinctive legal problems that cyberspace seems to produce? If the net is a separate legal sphere, where should its laws come from? What form of governance should it have? Will rules established and enforced within virtual worlds be entitled to deference from local governments and when? To what kinds of virtual worlds or cyberspaces should which rules about jurisdiction apply? Does anything about the medium of virtual worlds change the debate or what have we learned in the last decade?
Panel:
Richard Bartle, Creator of MUD
Michael Froomkin, University of Miami - Law
Dan Hunter, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania (Moderator)
David Johnson, New York Law School
David Post, New York Law School
Viktor Mayer-Schoenberger, Harvard University - School of Public Policy
Joel R. Reidenberg, Fordham University - Law
Tim Wu, University of Virginia - Law
2:00 - 3:30PM
Architecture in Virtual Worlds
Panel:
Ann Beamish, University of Texas - School of Architecture
Nathan Glazer, Harvard - Sociology and Education
Yehuda Kalay, University of California - Berkely, School of Architecture
Jonathan Zittrain, Oxford Internet Institute
Martin Zogran, Harvard Design School - Dept. of Urban Planning & Design
Also... Architecture Contest
Judges: The Architecture Panel with
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