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SimCity Societies – What Kinds of Cities Would You Build? (Video)

By SimCity, SimCity Societies

Coming in November from EA is the latest incarnation of the SimCity franchise – SimCity Societies. EA have released a couple of teasers for the game via YouTube, as embedded below:

Teaser 1:




Teaser 2:



The game includes (according to EA) an all-new, revolutionary feature set, SimCity Societies allows you to create your own kinds of cities and shape their cultures and environments. Make your cities green or polluted, contemporary or futuristic, rural or urban. Create an artistic society or a police state, an industrial city or a spiritual community—or any society you want!

We will be running a full feature on SimCity Societies closer to its release date.

SimCity Societies – What Kinds of Cities Would You Build? (Video)

By SimCity, SimCity Societies

Coming in November from EA is the latest incarnation of the SimCity franchise – SimCity Societies. EA have released a couple of teasers for the game via YouTube, as embedded below:

Teaser 1:




Teaser 2:



The game includes (according to EA) an all-new, revolutionary feature set, SimCity Societies allows you to create your own kinds of cities and shape their cultures and environments. Make your cities green or polluted, contemporary or futuristic, rural or urban. Create an artistic society or a police state, an industrial city or a spiritual community—or any society you want!

We will be running a full feature on SimCity Societies closer to its release date.

Branding and Counterfeiting in Virtual Worlds – Digital Data?

By Second Life

Second Life and its predecessors such as ActiveWorlds represent the best in web 2.0 – the ability to reconstruct any real world object in the virtual environment. With this however comes the murky waters of copyright of real world objects in a digital world where objects are viewed as simply data.

We started thinking about such issues when we noticed the Nike logo on our trainers which are part our persona in Second Life. The trainers were given to us by a fellow Second Life citizen without a thought to copyright or payment for the use of the design.

Yet in Virtual Worlds products do not have to be manufactured, they are simply made once and then copied as many times as needs be, often by users simply swapping goods between themselves.

Within Second Life there is a thriving economy and many real world brands do have a legitimate presence in the environment. The movie embedded below by Gary Hayes at PersonlizeMedia.com provides an overview of brands in Second Life:

Law Firm Evensheds have issued a warning that legal action maybe around the corner for users selling fake goods in virtual worlds, the Retail Bulletin has a good article on this exploring the problems of legal actions on users that are in all essence virtual.

The same issues relate to data of the traditionally geographic kind, we have been able to import building outlines into Second Life but does this infringe copyright of the Ordnance Survey? Without doubt the answer is yes and in light of the current view of the Ordnance Survey on licensing, importing into Second Life is an issue that is not worth pursuing further (see Google and the Ordnance Survey: Disappointed).

Along similar lines does reconstructing the built environment in virtual worlds infringe copyright on use of branding with say importing a Woolworth’s retail unit to communicate built form? Issues of copyright of geographic data are however perhaps minor in terms of the blatant cloning of real world goods such as trainers, cars and clothing in Second Life.

The looming threat of legal action is however worrying, if we can copy real world objects and use them virtually surely it is flattering to the company and not an issue of future court proceedings?

Then again….

Branding and Counterfeiting in Virtual Worlds – Digital Data?

By Second Life

Second Life and its predecessors such as ActiveWorlds represent the best in web 2.0 – the ability to reconstruct any real world object in the virtual environment. With this however comes the murky waters of copyright of real world objects in a digital world where objects are viewed as simply data.

We started thinking about such issues when we noticed the Nike logo on our trainers which are part our persona in Second Life. The trainers were given to us by a fellow Second Life citizen without a thought to copyright or payment for the use of the design.

Yet in Virtual Worlds products do not have to be manufactured, they are simply made once and then copied as many times as needs be, often by users simply swapping goods between themselves.

Within Second Life there is a thriving economy and many real world brands do have a legitimate presence in the environment. The movie embedded below by Gary Hayes at PersonlizeMedia.com provides an overview of brands in Second Life:

Law Firm Evensheds have issued a warning that legal action maybe around the corner for users selling fake goods in virtual worlds, the Retail Bulletin has a good article on this exploring the problems of legal actions on users that are in all essence virtual.

The same issues relate to data of the traditionally geographic kind, we have been able to import building outlines into Second Life but does this infringe copyright of the Ordnance Survey? Without doubt the answer is yes and in light of the current view of the Ordnance Survey on licensing, importing into Second Life is an issue that is not worth pursuing further (see Google and the Ordnance Survey: Disappointed).

Along similar lines does reconstructing the built environment in virtual worlds infringe copyright on use of branding with say importing a Woolworth’s retail unit to communicate built form? Issues of copyright of geographic data are however perhaps minor in terms of the blatant cloning of real world goods such as trainers, cars and clothing in Second Life.

The looming threat of legal action is however worrying, if we can copy real world objects and use them virtually surely it is flattering to the company and not an issue of future court proceedings?

Then again….

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