9:00 am
9:15 am | Welcome Back and Review
with Douglas
Thomas |
9:15 am 10:45 am | Developer
Roundtable Our conference theme is "Plateau" and
our idea in suggesting this theme was to address the current status of
games and virtual world development. If you take a look at the current
lineup of MMOs and VWs, most of the design ideas were present in the
earliest games and worlds. An outsider might justifiably say that we
haven't come very far in the last twenty years. Our speakers in this panel
are all game developers and will address directly whether we have plateaued
in MMO/VW/games. They will examine innovative design solutions, and try to
give an idea of where we might go from
here. Speakers: Nick
Fortugno Jesse
Houston Raph
Koster Dan
Norton Michael
Sellers | Government and Policy Governments and
political institutions generally don't get games, and until recently they
have been reluctant to engage much with virtual worlds. But one thing that
you can say about the hype in virtual worlds over the last few years is
that it has encouraged “serious” institutions to begin looking
at the field. This panel will examine physical-world governance, policy and
governmental action and ask what use they have made of the opportunities of
games and virtual worlds to date, what they are likely to do, and what more
can be done. It will also examine some of the regulatory activities that
face games and virtual world developers, and how these challenges can be
faced. Speakers: Ken
Doroshow Seth
Krauss Ren
Reynolds Andrew
Sparrow Kevin
Werbach |
10:45 am
11:00 am | Coffee Break / Away
From Keyboard |
11:00 am 12:30 pm | Kids, Tweens and
Teens Anyone who has followed virtual worlds knows about the
amazing uptake in the kid and young adult market, in games and social
spaces like Webkinz, Habbo Hotel, Runescape, Club Penguin, There and
Whyville. Our speakers will examine the special challenges of youth
spaces, looking at questions like the community management of young
audiences, special regulatory and management issues that emerge, and how
to engage younger audiences in the environments. They will also ask about
the special role of parents, and how these spaces may reinforce certain
models of ex-world relationships. Speakers: Betsy
Book Erin
Hoffman Douglas
Thomas Angela
Tiffin Joost
van Dreunen | Security & Surveillance Virtual worlds
are now mainstream and populous, and with their acceptance and significance
come all manner of problematic behavior. Whether we're talking about
domestic criminal activity like money laundering and the dissemination of
objectionable content, or about terrorism training in virtual worlds,
these online places raise issues for security professionals and law
enforcement. At the same time virtual worlds allow for total surveillance
of participants, the interests of security can't help but clash
dramatically with privacy rights and the expectations of users. This panel
is comprised of experts from multiple viewpoints in the
security/surveillance debate, and the speakers will talk about the nature
of the security aspects, concerns, and opportunities of human behavior in
virtual worlds, and present differing approaches to dealing with these
sorts of behaviors. Speakers: Lt. Charles
Cohen Roderick
Jones Michael
Schrage Bart Simon,
Ph.D Michael
Theis |
12:30 pm 2:00 pm | Lunch -
Old Media, New Media and New New Media In
this roundtable chat a passel of seasoned reporters and journalists will
chat informally about the way they report, write about, and understand the
new media forms that virtual worlds represent. Each has published a range
of material for the general audience on virtual worlds and machinima and
other components of this new media form, and they will share war stories
about the way that they try to make arcane virtual worlds understandable
for the general audience, how they sell these ideas to editors, and the
challenges of trying to be serious about crazy worlds and weird
games. Speakers: Ta-Nehisi
Coates Bernhard
Drax Julian
Dibbell |
2:00 pm 3:30 pm | Philanthropy and
Virtual Worlds Foundations and philanthropies occupy a
unique space in virtual worlds, with a tremendous opportunity to
legitimize what happens in virtual worlds as well as reach a networked
audience that is critical to obtaining many organizational goals. Speakers
will discuss how philanthropic organizations can use virtual worlds to
foster their missions. They will share how they frame their objectives in
virtual worlds to appeal to governing board members, internal competing
agendas, and press media. And they will look at important foundation
questions regarding the process to fund virtual world research, methods to
reach philanthropic objectives such as education or outreach, and why
philanthropy should be an active player as virtual worlds take
shape. Speakers: Jia Ji Dr.
Merrilea J. Mayo Diana
Rhoten, Ph.D Dr. Connie
Yowell | The Laws and Governance of Virtual Worlds It wouldn't be a State of Play conference without us discussing
difficult issues of governance, institutions and the legal theories
underlying them: Our first conference was about this topic in a big way,
and we want to see how far we have come since then. Our speakers on this
panel will talk about the ways that virtual worlds resemble the pre-modern
governance structures of the feudal system, the way that virtual worlds can
help to understand property systems, and why virtual communities must
govern and police equality. Speakers: James
Grimmelmann Gregory
Lastowka Yee Fen
Lim Juliet
M. Moringiello Jon
Penney |
3:30 pm 3:45
pm | Coffee Break / Away From
Keyboard |
3:45 pm 5:15 pm | Studying
Virtual Worlds This roundtable discussion will examine how
we go about studying virtual worlds, looking at the range of quantitative
and qualitative approaches available. Our panelists are the leading
researchers of virtual worlds, and they each come from different
methodological backgrounds. Sometimes their approaches differ, and in one
recent debate a number of them got into it over their view about the way
that virtual worlds research is (and should be) done. We expect a lively
debate about the problems with studying virtual worlds and how some
methods might be better used to get at the answers to useful research
questions. Speakers: Tom
Boellstorff Timothy J.
Burke Thomas
Malaby Dmitri
Williams |
5:15 pm 8:00 pm | Cocktail Party In which we have
a drink before (tearfully) saying our
goodbyes… |
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