Archive for the 'Market' Category

Second Life: A Real Life Subpoena


August 6th, 2007

Earlier today, Reuters reported about a pending Real Life lawsuit regarding property rights in Second Life.

Summary of the case:

“Second Life firm Eros, run by Kevin Alderman (Second Life: Stroker Serpentine) sued resident Volkov Catteneo in July, charging he illicitly sold copies of Eros’ “SexGen” bed. As part of the lawsuit, Eros subpoenaed PayPal and Linden Lab in an attempt to discover Catteneo’s real-world identity” (Reuters).

Linden labs and Paypal have both been subpoenaed, but Paypal, as of today, has complied. Linden labs has yet to supply any information.

The subpoena will result in Linden lab handing over, as Reuters writes, ” ‘the entirety of identifying information’ the company has on the avatar, including Catteneo’s Internet protocol addresses and chat histories.”

Click here to read the full article.

 

SL Economy: An Unsustainable Boom?


August 3rd, 2007

Matthew Beller of Ludwig von Mises Institute released an article today titled The Coming Second Life Business Cycle, which critiques Linden Lab’s execution and management of the LindeX and SL economy.

Beller states that SL’s intervention in society, by freely controlling the key commodity: money, will lead to some sort of recession for the SL economy. Beller writes, “[The sales of L$] do not reflect a flow of real wealth into Second Life. Instead, they are created by Linden to represent wealth, but no economic production was involved in creating them.”

Linden Credit Card*

To my understanding, Beller is suggesting since Linden Labs can create as much L$ to make up for their “budgetary shortfalls without ever issuing any debt,” they generate an artificial inflation of the currency and thus point SL towards an unstable economy.

He offers two possible outcomes:

“In the first, Linden will stop running significant deficits at some point. With less L$ available to spend, residents will demand fewer goods and services, leading to lower prices and reduced profits.”

“[And in the second,] Linden will continue running deficits to the point that a sufficient number of residents and speculators will recognize the L$’s frailty…[and] everyone will scramble to redeem his L$ for “real goods,” which, in the case of Second Life, is probably the US$.”

Ultimately, Matthew Beller’s article does not offer a positive outlook for the SL economy, however he does tender his opinion on how to avert an SL recession. “If Linden wants to prevent this from happening and foster a stable, growing economy within Second Life, it should apply the lessons of Austrian economics to its policies: abolish restrictions on content, strengthen the ability of residents to enforce their property rights, and, most important, tie the L$ to a real-world commodity money backed by 100% reserves.”

Chronos Laval

[*http://www.makezine.com/blog/archive/2006/03/the_future_of_credit_cards_ear.html#more]