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Summer 2009

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57 WWW.HPLusmAGAzINe.COm 57 WWW.HPLusmAGAzINe.COm 57 57 How Deep the rabbit Hole goes. Digital People who rely less on non-digital people tend to experience something more akin to confusion than discrimination. extropia Dasilva (a Digital Person who is also a transhumanism activist, essayist and text- based public speaker) explained, "It is not uncommon for people to ask out loud if I have multiple Personality Disorder after I explain what a digital person is." Ivanova shostakovich (a Digital Person who is also a virtual furniture designer and the co-owner, with Peter stindberg, of a second Life store called Greene Concept Furniture) emphasizes that discrimination is not limited to the divide between the devoutly anonymous Digital People and those avatars for whom anonymity is unimportant: "most examples of prejudice I have heard of in second Life are between different cultural subsets." Hers is a valid point. Furries (avatars that resemble natural or cartoon-like animals) still risk frequent harassment in public places; and avatars that resemble children are banned in many sL locations because of fear that some may be the creation of child molesters looking for avatar-on-avatar sex. small-breasted short women who want their avatar to look like their real body have been subjected to insults and discrimination based on this fear, as have people who wish to relive aspects of their childhood by being an avatar child. Discrimination today is pretty much universally frowned on. But Digital People's rights are still subject to much debate, even in the most techno-progressive circles. For example, when, in December, 2008, the Order of Cosmic engineers (a transhumanist organization of physical people that holds meetings in second Life because its membership is global) accepted into its ruling body not one but three Digital People, there was a passionate debate as to whether the new members could vote. since second Life allows anyone to create any number of avatars, without limit, for free, community members voiced concern that someone who exists only as an anonymous avatar could vote twice by creating two avatars. Despite the Order of Cosmic engineers' respect and admiration for the individuals in question, they decided to make the three Digital People non-voting members. scope Cleaver doesn't seem to think things will change soon. "I don't see it improving. There was a chat about this recently in the metanomics Group (ed: a group in second Life that discusses business, education, economics, science and policy in the metaverse: meaning all virtual worlds, gaming or not, online and off). [Anonymous avatars] seem to be a hot topic in sL related blogs lately. There sure seems to be a movement toward untangling and shaping how people think about the issue." When asked if the mood was mostly pro or anti, he said, "Anti, especially when it comes to business." World of Warcraft has seen discrimination too. On June 19, 2007, Wired online reported that some guilds will not let players join unless they use voice chat, because text-only chat "seems shifty." Don't Dis my Creds, bro. sophrosyne stenvaag is the host of sophrosyne's saturday salon, a series of discussion events in second Life. Her guests have included, in avatar form, many noteworthy thinkers such as bestselling authors robert J. sawyer, David Brin, Charles stross, Catherine Asaro and Kim stanley robinson. sophrosyne experienced some in-your-face discrimination from within the hallowed halls of academia. "Last summer I attended a fascinating conference in a digital world," sophrosyne told me. "There was a lot of interest in keeping the group together afterwards to build a digital community. Two of the three sessions were run by academics with little experience in digital world events. The moderators seemed to think that their high-level credentials entitled them to deference from the pseudonymous masses around them. "events after the conference took a natural digital-world-style turn: a democratic, collaborative desire to create the basis for an ongoing community. I contributed a little organizing — networking people to projects, and providing a few ideas for events. One of the conference organizers emailed me, politely asking for my credentials. That's where things got interesting. "Basically, I told him: Here's my bio. Here are links to my portfolio, my project website, my dozen or so digital presences — business blog, personal blog, business and personal Twitters, business and personal Flickr sites. Here's a list of references in business, academia, and government that I've done project work for. I was applying a tribal standard: look, here are the elders who can vouch for me, the assets I've acquired, the measures of my standing in my tribe." But his take was: "I don't understand or value any of this. What I need to know is your atomic name, and the names of the entities that verifi ed your intelligence and employability — schools and corporate employers. That's what will let me determine if you are generally real and trustworthy. He was applying an atomic standard: don't tell me personal crap, give me your brains and dedication credit ratings from agencies I respect. And it rapidly went bad from there." "For me," sophrosyne said, "reality and legitimacy were digital. I was involved in a project that would affect my digital reputation. For him, reality and legitimacy were atomic, and the project would affect his atomic reputation." This is the crux of the divide. some people believe that the same tools used to measure reputation in the physical world can — or must — be used in a virtual world. And for Digital People this is an impasse. They won't submit to that standard. second Life, and perhaps other virtual worlds, have evolved reputation systems sophisticated enough to verify an anonymous avatar's credibility. But as sophrosyne points out, these systems aren't familiar to most people alive today. Our tribal ancestors would not have been so ignorant. They successfully used these community reputation systems — these tribal codes —through hundreds of millennia. For me, reality and legitimacy were digital. i was involved in a project that would affect my digital reputation. For him, reality and legitimacy were atomic.

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