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| Avatar Identity Poster |
Talking more about first life reinforced those interactions and I realized that I was interacting through place and avatar less and less . . . The more I experienced it as a 3D chatroom, the less important Second Life felt to me as a place.
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| A few of the issues and stakeholders in virtual worlds |
I received a DM recently that accused me of reposting a tweet without giving proper RT attribution. I didn't have a clue about which one I allegedly pilfered, but she unfollowed me so I couldn't DM and figure out what happened. The following essay is from a 2009 post from one of my human counterpart's blogs and sums up my take on the topic:There’s been discussion recently about “retweet theft". I have a two problems with any gravity attached to that concept. One is philosophical and the other technical.
Philosophical: I admit I sometimes feel a twinge of indignity when a follower posts a link I recently tweeted without giving me the RT credit. Fortunately, I usually remember that buying into any sense of being wronged is an inaccurate and personally destructive apprehension of reality.
If my motivation in sharing something is altruistic, then the fact that the link gets passed along should trump any perceived slight. And since it’s likely that an omission is unintentional, I’m better served by examining my own motivation instead of getting worked up by trying to mind-read the intentions of the perpetrator.
Technical: As the graphic above visualizes, the vast majority of links I run across every day are from Feedly, not my Twitter client. I imagine that few people use Twitter as their primary news monitoring source. The odds are very likely that most tweet-worthy items we find are from other venues.
Just because many of us have access to a Twitter client every waking hour doesn’t mean we have the time and attention to notice every post in our stream. Nor are we obligated to try. The more people we follow, the less likely it is that we’ll keep up with everyone’s posts, and the more likely it is that we’ll unintentionally fail to give someone credit who has previously posted something in our stream that we find in a different source.
And that’s okay.

The correct emotional response to "I just don't get it" is curiosity, not contempt.As usual, I eventually ended up pointing my pointing finger back at myself. Instead of trying to think about the issue from the perspective of the questioners, I reflexive responded with a visual sneer. Oh well.
We are in the cloud and we are wearing it . . . The computer is an instrument whose music is ideas. The augmented conversation is Jazz. David A. Smith at FCVW 2011
We say, "Music shall fill the air." We never say, "Music shall fill a particular segment of the air." Marshall McLuhan in The Medium is the MassageEarly adopters of the horseless carriage didn't have the faintest clue that automobiles would eventually transform almost every aspect of life: wars; suburbanization; integration; retail chains; woman's liberation; climate change, etc. The conversations we tend to have today in the avatar community about virtual worlds are analogous to early car adopters getting worked up about Henry Ford's decisions on pricing and features for the latest version of the Model T.
It's no longer virtual worlds, but a virtual world. Sandy Kearney at FCVW 2011
Our technology forces us to live mythically, but we continue to think fragmentarily, and on single, separate planes. Marshall McLuhan

