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Online Games Having Trouble With The Whole Free Speech Concept







Online Games Having Trouble With The
Whole Free Speech Concept

Online Games Having Trouble With The
Whole Free Speech Concept
12/12/2003 08:51 PM

I'm beginning to wonder if the various creators of online community games really thought through all of the issues they were raising in setting up the games. They were, in some sense, creating a new space, where they were acting as the government. In most cases, they have terms of service - but that's not quite the same as a constitution. So, now, when real-life problems move across the virtual/real boarder, they're struggling. We've discussed this before, and looked at how some are trying to answer the question, but Salon has an interesting article looking at the latest happenings in the Sims Online. One member has been acting as a sort of National Enquirer of the online world and posting articles to a blog. He focuses on the "bad" people in the world - the scammers and other questionable characters. There are some interesting legal issues raised by the people he talks to - such as the underage boy who plays a female character in the game and is engaged in virtual prostitution for in-game money, which can be sold for real cash on eBay. Is that really prostitution? There's also the "Sims Shadow Government" that we've discussed before to try to deal with these situations in the game. It appears that they felt the real government (that is, the company that puts the Sims Online) is absent and so they're there to fill the void. In the meantime, the folks at EA, who run the Sims Online, don't appear to have given this much thought. Instead of dealing with these issues, they've kicked the reporter out and closed down his account, saying he violated their policies. In other words, they seem to be going with something of a despot government that will exile and censor whoever raises any threatening questions. That's their choice, of course, as it is their world. However, it probably won't get them the best reputation as a virtual place to live. How many people do you know who are actively immigrating into countries run by dictators?




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Online Games Having Trouble With The Whole Free Speech Concept

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Trouble with Online Games


Trouble with Online Games 07/16/2004 08:41 PM

Wired reports on Electonic Arts' decision to shut down UXO (Ultima X: Odyssey) and goes on to elaborate on the pain and cost of running a massive online games.  While developing the game client and server itself is within the realm of developers' abilities, creating the content of a virtual world and keeping it an interesting place to live in is a difficult and neverending task that most developers will find difficult to manage, even if they have a deep pocket like EA.

The missing ingredient in today's online games that full 3D online world developers forgot to translate from MUD (Multiple User Dungeon, a text-only online world) is community participation in building and maintaining the online world.  Instead of hiring legions of artists and area designers, they should have leveraged the creative power of the players themselves by creating tools and offering incentives.  With such legions of superusers, all they needed was a much smaller staff to control the legion.

Player participation in running online worlds should not stop with content but also operation.  Let the superusers handle most of the in-game headaches such as user complaints and conflict moderation.  Going beyond that, superusers should also be used to play NPC roles such as monsters, shop owners, etc.

Unfortunately, EA looked only at the numbers and chose the easy way out instead of using UXO as an opportunity to explore more creative options.


Online gambling ads: free speech or
illegal?


Online gambling ads: free speech or
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Lawsuit Claims Free Speech for Online
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08/22/2004 09:19 PM
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In Victory for Online Free Speech,
Supreme Court Upholds Block on Internet
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"Fetchfido's Free Online Games - Eskiv"


"Fetchfido's Free Online Games - Eskiv" 07/18/2004 03:10 PM

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fetchfido.co.uk/games/eskiv/eskiv.htm
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Blackjack Slots 21 a World-Class Casino
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While the US has been notoriously tough on the idea of any online gambling in the US, there are a number of companies doing quite well in the somewhat "gray" area of online games of skill for money. These aren't games of chance, but still require players to put up money, and the winners go home with more than they put in. The difference, of course, is that the win is based (at least somewhat) on the skills of the players. However, this can be a very fine line. Most games involve a mix of skill and luck, and you can make the claim that classic gambling games like poker and blackjack require some amount of skill as well. Still, the online "games of skill" providers claim they're just like a typical sports association, like the US Tennis Association, that sets up tournaments and awards prizes to the winners - minus their own cut. Of course, they conveniently skip over the part about where the money comes from. With these online games, it is still a "pay to enter" sort of contest. Either way, it's not entirely clear how the legal issues will play out. Some states already bar such online games of skill, but many don't. Federal laws are still unclear, and the companies involved in this space are lobbying heavily to try to make the point that they should be allowed to continue where online gambling sites are forbidden.

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Free Speech


Free Speech 07/04/2004 08:54 AM
Chicago Tribune Jul 4 2004 12:13PM GMT

It's Not About Free Speech


It's Not About Free Speech 03/22/2005 04:24 PM

So, about all this lawsuit stuff about revealing sources: it's not about bloggers being journalists. You're a fool if you're looking at it from that angle. They're suing to learn which person they trusted broke that trust; which person signed a contract and broke the terms of that contract.

In short, they're not terrorizing the bloggers, they're going after their own employees and/or developers to show that the NDA has teeth. As such, don't expect negative press to shut it down. They're going to keep going because the future of the NDA is at stake, not the future of blogging. I believe that Apple honestly couldn't give a rat's ass about that. You can bring free speech and journalism and sources and all that shit into this all you want, but in the end, Apple is protecting its right to hold people to contracts they sign. Don't expect this to go away any time soon, and especially not from public opinion.

If you sign a piece of paper, you better damn well read what you signed. That's all this comes down to. No need to lament the "death" of free speech (which was intended to mean you can't get arrested for speaking your mind, not revealing corporate secrets that you promised, in a contract, that you wouldn't, or conspiring with that person to reveal them); free speech isn't dead. You can lambast the government all you want, or be the whistle-blower at a corporation all you need. What's at stake here is Joe Blow saying he won't say a word and then telling the world everything he heard.


So much for free speech in the US II


So much for free speech in the US II 10/29/2003 12:09 AM
I can't help but wonder what goes on in the heads of the airlines staff throwing off people because of buttons. No matter the text...

Suppressing Free Speech


Suppressing Free Speech 03/29/2005 06:02 PM
Suppressing Free Speech
On "...Monday, March 28, the Secret Service called three everyday people into their offices to discuss why we were kicked out of a presidential event in Denver last week where Bush promoted his plan to privatize Social Security. What they revealed to us and our lawyer was fascinating.

There we were - three people who had personally picked up tickets from Republican Congressman Bob Beauprez's office and went to a presidential event. But as we entered, we were told that we had been 'ID'ed' and were warned that any disruption would get us arrested. After being seated in the audience we were forcibly removed before the President arrived, even though we had not been disruptive. We were shocked when told that this presidential event was a "private event" and were commanded to leave....The Secret Service revealed that we were 'ID'ed' when local Republican staffers saw a bumper sticker on the car we drove which said 'No More Blood For Oil.'" Related Associated Press story.

Speech isn't free if it's critical.


Speech isn't free if it's critical. 05/20/2004 10:17 AM
Poetry isn't free speech for these students. Bill Nevins, a New Mexico high school teacher was fired last year and classes in poetry and the poetry club at Rio Rancho High School were permanently terminated because he refused to censor a student's poetry that was "un-American."

Free speech: Do Americans really believe
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Free speech: Do Americans really believe
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07/04/2004 03:31 PM
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Free Speech in Action


Free Speech in Action 06/23/2004 05:19 PM
Take the President to the movies. Because how can you speak intelligently about a film if you haven't watched it?

Fair use = free speech


Fair use = free speech 07/11/2004 03:35 PM
Lessig points out a documentary on Fox News, one that makes extensive use of clips from Fox, without permission, to make its point, and what this means:
As the Times article describes, Greenwald's style for distributing documentaries may be the beginning of something new -- political criticism, using interviews and clips, making a strong political point, distributed through DVDs and political action groups. (See some other examples here). On what theory does he, and others, have the right to use such material without permission? On the free culture theory we call the First Amendment: Copyright law must, the Court told us in Eldred, embed "fair use"; "fair use" is informed by First Amendment values; the values of the First Amendment most relevant here are those expressed in New York Times v. Sullivan. As with news-gathering, critical political filmmaking needs a buffer zone of protection against the overreaching of the law. And if the potential of this medium -- now liberated by digital technology -- is to be realized, we need clear precedents that establish that critics have the freedom to criticize without having to hire a lawyer first.
Link (Thanks, Larry!)

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Welcome to the Free Speech Coalition 06/24/2005 05:56 PM
Perverted Speech Coalition

freespeechcoalition.com
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The Future of Free Speech


The Future of Free Speech 09/14/2004 01:54 AM
Cass Sunstein's The Future of Free Speech

"I seek to defend a particular conception of democracy — a deliberative conception — and to evaluate, in its terms, the outcome of a system with perfect power of filtering."

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Free Speech -- Virtually 12/19/2002 05:39 PM
Late last year, John Stanforth posted to his personal Web site a reminiscence about software he had developed for internal...

Fenwal Edge-Connect Gas Ignition Control
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Trouble for Online Vendors of Cigarettes


Trouble for Online Vendors of Cigarettes 04/03/2005 09:38 PM
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sad state of free speech in Canada


sad state of free speech in Canada 12/03/2003 06:22 AM
Bernstein: "You Can't Say That" .. their PC-speech-code laws .. David E. Bernstein writes .. NRO

nationalreview.com/comment/bernstein200312020910.asp
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Free Writing and Music - as in Speech


Free Writing and Music - as in Speech 01/11/2004 02:42 AM
I'd like you all to take a moment to browse the Common Content catalog. It is a categorized index of work which has one of the several Creative Commons licenses. Free licenses aren't just for software anymore. The top-level categories in the index are images, movies, audio, text and web sites. I'm taking the trouble to recommend Common Content just now because I don't think either the catalog or the Creative Commons licenses are as well known as they deserve to be.

Free Speech Behind the Razor Wire


Free Speech Behind the Razor Wire 07/27/2004 06:16 AM
A so-called free-speech zone has been set up to contain protesters at this week's Democratic National Convention. But it's ringed with chain link and barbed wire, and it looks a lot like a gulag. Mark Baard reports from Boston.

Testing Free Speech In America


Testing Free Speech In America 01/02/2005 01:56 PM
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High schoolers on free speech


High schoolers on free speech 02/01/2005 08:38 PM
David Pescovitz: A new study reveals that far too many US high school students don't seem to understand the meaning of free speech, aren't taught about the First Amendment, or simply don't care. A few choice excerpts from the AP story:
...When told of the exact text of the First Amendment, more than one in three high school students said it goes "too far" in the rights it guarantees. Only half of the students said newspapers should be allowed to publish freely without government approval of stories...

Three in four students said flag burning is illegal...

About half the students said the government can restrict any indecent material on the Internet.
Who is teaching these kids? Link

UPDATE: Fortunately at least some students aren't being entirely short-changed by their schools, as this email from BB reader Maxx Garrison points out:
"I am a junior (11th grade) at Cocalico High School. Our school has a mandatory course named Principals of Democracy. In this class, we are taught everything about the Constitution including an in depth study of the Bill of Rights. The students must also write a essay about a section of the bill of rights and also conduct a formal debate against fellow classmates. On this essay we must use at least 34 sources and my paper turned out to be 16 pages on the second amendment right to bear arms. So, just to clarify, some of us do know a thing or two about the constitution. Also, as students, we do not have the right to free speech, protection from unreasonable search or seizure, or freedom of assembly."
UPDATE: As reader Steve Jones points out, the common "principals" vs. "principles" spelling error in Maxx's email is particularly ironic in this case.

UPDATE: Blogger Britta Gustafson says:
Students do have the right to free speech, protection from unreasonable search or seizure, and freedom of assembly. The rights are more restricted than those of adults, but we have them. The extent depends on your state and school district.

I'm in 12th grade at a high school in the horrible Los Angeles Unified School District. My friends and I started an underground newspaper because the principal insisted on prior review if we did an official one. She can't stop us from publishing and distributing our paper as long as it is not disruptive, libelous, or obscene. We can only be searched randomly or if there is reasonable suspicion. We are free to assemble on and off campus as long as it is not disruptive.

The problem is that students don't have the resources to protect their rights. We get suspended if we don't wear the school uniform -- even though mandatory uniforms are illegal -- and we can't do much about it. The District bureaucrats don't care and legal action is out of reach for most of us.

But we write about it. High school journalism is still alive -- and the best way for us to learn what our 1st Amendment rights really mean.


Free Speech Takes Its Lumps


Free Speech Takes Its Lumps 07/26/2004 04:17 PM
  • Tim Rutten (LA Times; reg req): Free speech under fire all around the nation. At some point over the last decade the words "I think you're wrong about that" were replaced by the dismissive "you can't say that." The opponents of free speech always have a higher value that must be maintained by silencing somebody else — patriotism for the Las Vegas louts; a woman's right to sexual privacy in Colorado; a distaste for politicized airwaves in Washington. But this isn't a discussion that admits a distinction between regrettable means and a desirable end. Speech is free for everyone or it's free for no one. There is a long and painful history to teach us that when liberty of expression is suppressed, the public square does not become a silent place but one where the only sound is the voice of authority.

  • Free speech, bad taste and the Pope.


    Free speech, bad taste and the Pope. 03/17/2005 03:20 AM
    "The 52 funniest things about the upcoming death of the Pope," by New York Press columnist Matt Taibbi, generated controversy that spread from conservative blogs outward. The Press was de nounced by legislators, one of whom suggested New Yorkers throw the paper away; it was slammed by gossip columnist Lloyd Grove, possibly in retaliation for Grove's being named No. 20 on this list. After refusing a suspension, Press editor Jeff Koyen resigned and bashed his bosses, calling one a "spineless alt-weekly weenie." The public back-and-forth between erstwhile editor and former boss continues, but Taibbi's response to the whole thing is probably the best after the fact summary.

    Nikken opposed to free speech


    Nikken opposed to free speech 01/27/2004 12:37 PM
    Jarle Dahl Bergersen recently received a Cease and Decist letter from the Nikken bullies for alleged copyright infringement. Nikken writes:...

    free speech gagged--thanks to the
    Patriot Act


    free speech gagged--thanks to the
    Patriot Act
    05/30/2004 11:21 PM
    National Security Letters and John Doe --once only issued against suspected terrorists and spies, NSLs now can be used, thanks to the Patriot Act, against all and any of us. John Doe, the currently gagged owner of a small ISP was targeted for the political speech of his customers and is fighting, along with the ACLU and others. More here (and more inside)

    Should universities permit free speech?


    Should universities permit free speech? 01/07/2004 04:25 PM

    The October 10, 2003 issue of MIT's student newspaper, the Tech, carried some articles about a group of unfortunate students who decided to hold a ghetto/rap-themed party in their dorm.  The invitation email started "Callin all you playas, pimps, hos, gangstas, and bitches...".  Various campus functionaries indicated their displeasure at what they viewed as an assault on the sacred principle of diversity. The students immediately issued a craven apology to the community but nonetheless Chuck Vest, the president of MIT, responded by noting that his administration would "deal swiftly and fairly with those responsible for the event."

    Today's issue of the Tech carries some more invective from the administration directed as these allegedly racist students.

    There was no actual evidence of racism by the students holding the party and in fact the only people involved in this dispute who are known to judge others by the color of their skin are the MIT administrators themselves.

    A very similar situation occurred in the 1990s at University of California Riverside.  A fraternity held a "South of the Border" party advertised with a poster featuring a sleeping Mexican, complete with sombrero and tequila bottle.The frat boys were harshly disciplined until a lawyer sued the school, pointing out that (a) half of the fraternity brothers were Mexican-American, and (b) the First Amendment prohibited a state institution from editing the fraternity's party posters.  A federal judge sided with the students.

    So many university administrations have tried to muzzle their students that an entire non-profit organization, http://www.thefire.org, exists to fight back.

    Perhaps, however, the university bureaucrats are doing the right thing after all.  The U.S. Constitution guarantees that the government won't interfere with your right to free speech.  Private employers, however, are free to say "You will continue to receive a paycheck so long as you stay in your cubicle with your head down and your mouth shut."  Only a tiny fraction of Americans have a practical right to free speech and these are primarily the very rich and the very poor.  A primary mission of a college is to prepare young people for the real world.  Does it really make sense to delude kids into thinking that they can say whatever they want and still have a paycheck and health insurance?  Perhaps it would be better for a university president to address the incoming freshmen thusly... "This is my plantation and if you want to stay here for four years you'll learn to say 'Yes, Massah'".


    StopFCC.Com - The campaign for free
    speech.


    StopFCC.Com - The campaign for free
    speech.
    05/03/2004 03:57 AM
    Stop FCC - Free Speech Campaign Petition First Amendment Rights .. Here's how you can help do something about it .. Props to the 1st amendment .. sign the petition .. StopFCC.org

    stopfcc.com
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    Diversity! Tolerance! Free speech!


    Diversity! Tolerance! Free speech! 09/17/2004 12:30 PM
    Score one for tolerance and diversity. Three-year-old Sophia Parlock cries while seated on the shoulders of her father, Phil Parlock, after having their Bush-Cheney sign torn up by Kerry-Edwards supporters on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2004, at the Tri-State Airport in Huntington, W.Va. Do the smirking people in this photo really feel proud for terrorizing a three-year-old girl?

    Is A Ban On Gambling Ads A Violation Of
    Free Speech?


    Is A Ban On Gambling Ads A Violation Of
    Free Speech?
    08/17/2004 03:50 AM
    Earlier this year, we noted that the Justice Department was telling websites they might be "aiding and abetting" illegal activity by running ads for online gambling operations, even if those operations were perfectly legal and run outside of the US. Now, the operator of a casino news website, Casino City, has filed a a lawsuit to have it declared that running such ads is protected free speech, and that the government can't tell them to stop. Of course, there are some precedents, such as bans on liquor and tobacco advertising, but it doesn't appear that any specific law has been put in place banning gambling ads. Still, all of this makes you wonder if the Department of Justice doesn't have slightly more important things to be worrying about than if a casino news site has ads from online casinos.

    Web porn law violates free speech: U.S.
    court


    Web porn law violates free speech: U.S.
    court
    06/29/2004 07:10 PM
    CTV.ca Jun 29 2004 11:11PM GMT
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