High Fidelity And Identity In The Metaverse

I’ve had a lot of trouble and Strife (Onizuka) putting this post together. Haiku and LSL aren’t my thing and I need to have my wits about me today, so I’m staying on safer ground. So from a post from yesterday, Philip Rosedale has added an interesting blog post regarding how identity may work in High Fidelity : Identity in the Metaverse.

In the post Philip talks of how we don’t generally have name tags above our head or on our person when out and about. I mean some wear them at work, but it’s not a permanent identifier. We exchange names when we need to or are ready to. This is basic human instinct at play here, something social networks seem to be trying to consign to the dustbin of history, but instinct is on our side.

However at times we need to not only provide our name, we need to prove it too. I’ve had to take my Passport to the bank to open a new account, I also had to take my passport to work, even though I’d been working there for many moons. However I only provide the additional information when it’s absolutely required, we don’t carry our passports around with us and show them to strangers just to create trust. The exchange of trust comes in many forms, some more official than others.

Now you may be wondering what any of this has to do with High Fidelity. High Fidelity it seems is not going to be a walled garden, there will be other operators and when you visit their worlds, there will be different ID requirements. One of the concerns with OpneSim has always been about the operators. However this goes both ways and operators will therefore want to make their decisions about who they let in and what level of trust they require, Philip explains this with a brief overview in the blog post :

A ‘metaverse’ of connected internet servers run by different people and containing different parts of the virtual world poses an additional challenge: Not only do you need to have the choice when and to whom to disclose parts of your identity, you also cannot always trust the particular server you are ‘inside’ with different aspects of your identity. This is similar to visiting a new website and being unwilling to give credit card information, or unwilling to login using Twitter or Facebook, until you understand and trust the site.

Our design with High Fidelity is the one that seems like the best solution to meet these goals: Operators of different virtual world servers (we call these ‘domains’) can decide on the level of identity security with which they wish to challenge people arriving at their locations. This can range from nothing (meaning that disclosure of identity information is totally up to you), to a requirement akin to cookies on websites (I want a token that I can use to identify you the next time you login here, but I don’t need to know who you really are), or finally a request for unambiguous identity infomation (I want to know your real name to allow you to login here).

I’ve bolded those parts because Philip bolded them in his post! However obviously you need somebody to trust in the first place to run an identity system such as this and High Fidelity will be offering that service.

Continue reading “High Fidelity And Identity In The Metaverse”

Philip Rosedale, Ebbe Altberg And Maria Korolov Amongst Keynote Speakers For VWBPE 2014

Virtual Worlds Best Practices in Education (VWBPE) will be holding their 7th annual conference in Second Life and OSGrid between April 9th – 12th this year and the keynote and featured speakers have been pencilled in. Some of them should be extremely familiar, especially High Fidelity CEO Philip Rosedale.

Another familiar name for some of you, especially those in OpenSim circles, is Maria Korolov of Hybergrid Business.

Then of course there’s new Linden Lab CEO Ebbe Altberg, who is a late addition to the schedule, so late that he wasn’t in the email I received about the conference!

The full schedule for the conference will be released soon, but here are the known keynote and featured speakers :

Opening Keynote: Closing the Gap: Virtual Reality & Education

Presenter: Philip Rosedale, CEO High Fidelity

Date/Time: Wednesday April 9th, at 1:00pm PDT

Location: Second Life – VWBPE Central Auditorium

Featured Keynote: Connections in an Open Place

Presenter: Justin Clark-Casey, President OpenSimulator umbrella Overte Foundation

Date/Time: Thursday April 10th, at 7:00am PDT

Location: OSGrid – VWBPE Gateway

Featured Keynote: The Coming 3D Future Shock

Presenter: Maria Korolov, Editor in Chief – Hypergrid Business

Date/Time: Thursday April 10th, at 10:05am PDT
Location: OSGrid – VWBPE Gateway

Featured Keynote: Using Virtual Worlds and Gamification to Enhance Learning

Presenter: Andrew Hughes, CEO Designing Digitally

Date/Time: Friday April 11th, at 7:00am PDT

Location: Second Life – VWBPE Central Auditorium

Featured Keynote: TBA

Presenter: Ebbe Altberg, CEO Linden Lab

Date/Time: Friday April 11th, at 1:00pm PDT

Location: Second Life – VWBPE Central Auditorium

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Greyville – A Writer’s Colony In OpenSim Part Of The Hypergrid Stories Project

Welcome Centre

With many thanks to Talla Adam who is a member of the Opensim Virtual Community on Google+ I have discovered a writer’s colony in OpenSim. I had never been to OpenSim before so the first thing I had to do was to figure out how to get there.

Fortunately for the purposes of this visit, Nara Malone has an excellent blog post on the matter : An Author’s Guide to the Metaverse & How to visit Greyville Colony. After following those instructions I found myself at the Writers and Readers Colony at Greyville. Those who know how to use OpenSim will need to create an account for Naras Nook or go to  world.narasnook.com:8900. I’m not sure how this works with Hypergrid.

The welcome centre has a very useful notecard, which is so useful that it basically writes this blog for me! Now the first thing to note is that this is a work in progress. Nara Malone is the brains behind this, she’s the lady whose blog post I linked to above. The notecard includes details of the mission:

My mission here is to introduce authors to the power of the metaverse and all the ways it can inspire stories and assist in creating and promoting their work. I welcome suggestions and content from authors and readers. I expect to see lots of characters interacting with avatars and roaming all the regions here at Nara’s Nook. I have 16 regions for experimenting, exploring and inspiration. I don’t imagine I’ll ever be finished adding to them.

Inside the welcome centre I noticed notice boards for the following authors : Marilyn Campbell, Tracey Livesay, Nara Malone, Shannon Emmel, Leah St. James, Shara Lanel, Sofie Couch, Alexa Day, Siobhan Muir, Elvie Howard, Tina Glasneck, Kelly Jamieson, Denise Golonowski and Brandi Evans.

There are a number of buildings around and again I’ll use the notecard to describe some of the buildings there.

Writer’s Resource Center: The big brick building is the writer’s resource area. There is a classrooom for workshops, a self-guided tutorial area, and a library. I’m adding content as fast as I can. On the right, as soon as you walk through the main door, you will find information on all the authors currently a part of this grand experiment. There a few freebie objects in the library you might find useful.

Internet Cafe

Internet Cafe: Directly across the street from the landing area is the Dungeon Gourmet’s Internet Cafe. There are laptops there with internet access. Drop in and work on your novel, the page is set to yarn.me, a cloud wordprocessor that works here inworld. It will also allow you to save work to your computer. Try your hand at Yatze. Have a nice couple chat by the fire.

Continue reading “Greyville – A Writer’s Colony In OpenSim Part Of The Hypergrid Stories Project”

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