Re: [vwrap] Comments on http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-vwrap-in tro-00

"dyerbrookme@juno.com" <dyerbrookme@juno.com> Sun, 19 September 2010 23:12 UTC

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Subject: Re: [vwrap] Comments on http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-vwrap-in tro-00
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Fleep,

It's unfortunate that after Linden Lab withdrew its corporate support from this project, which might, still and all, keep it tethered to some kind of business reality on the Internet, the Open Sim people, who had hitherto avoided it for various political reasons, decided to join. So now now instead of making the world safe for LL hegemony, it will make the world safe for OS hegemony.

And...tourist mode is ok. A tourist just packs his belongings in a suitcase and travels temporarily. He doesn't drag the entire content of the homeland he left into the new world, destroying all its permissions, intellectual property rights, and social context for commerce.

So I'm fine with that.

I don't understand why educators keep flapping their arms at SL. Why don't you just go to Open Sim and make your own content? If your beef is that you can't copy even your own content (although apparently that is recognized as legal now), then...why stay there? Go to Open Sim and copy to your heart's content. If your beef is that you can't copy *other* people's content, even students that you feel should produce content that becomes your chattel, or university avatars that should be collectivized as much as people, then...again, why force your peculiar ideologically-driven use cases on the world? Go to open sim, copy, collectivize, coopt to your heart's content.

And see how you do in a world devoid of commerce, commercial context for the university, which you scorn yet live by in RL, and a world devoid of normal human commerce, and of course IP rights which are vital to the economy. Yes, *see how you do* so that you stop insisting that the world bork around to this outmoded leftist and utopian notion.

I realize all the reasons that compel you to so embrace opensource, Fleep -- expenses, portability, community, etc. etc. But the other things are important too for keeping communities viable. Your zeal to break them is what is confusing and troublesome. Why do you insist on breaking them, either at home, or abroad by trying to internationalize your isses as "interop"? Just go to Open Sim. Make what you want. Leave the walled gardens alone. God bless them, they preserve value and are getting better at keeping out vandals and pests.

Prokofy Neva

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Hi all,

I'm sure I need to go back through and re-read some of these documents to
find definitions, but I must be missing something entirely.  I've been
lurking on this list for some months and the statement that "VWRAP is not
now, nor has it ever been a protocol to enable
interoperability BETWEEN virtual worlds" took me completely by surprise.
I've been under the impression that was the entire point of this effort!

The OpenSim model described by Cristina, and the concerns raised by the
message at the start of this thread, pretty closely reflect my views and
concerns.  A consortia of universities is developing in which each
university will operate its own "world" - using their own access and
authentication schemes, internal system architecture, etc. - but allow our
researchers/students to be able to connect and go to the worlds of other
participating members to collaborate on research projects.  We need
protocols to help establish the ground rules for that connection, and what
the baseline requirements are for our "world" systems to be able to
communicate with one another, but ideally to be as minimally
intrusive/restrictive as possible.

Part of the interest in this experiment is similar to the "laboratories of
democracy" model in which each institution CAN and SHOULD do its own thing
internally so we can see what sorts of best practices and innovation in
internal system design emerges.  (In fact we have little choice, since each
institution is bound by different laws and policies governing things like
authentication and student data.) In our use case, this is not a "tourist"
model OR a "walled garden" model - it's both!  Each institution
intends/needs to have areas of their "world" that are off limits to other
institutions, and some areas that are accessible to members of the
consortia.  Figuring out which bits we need to pass back and forth to make
this work is, I thought, what VWRAP would be addressing.


I will go back through and re-read the source documents with Meadhbh's
comments in mind, but I wanted to chime in and say Cristina's concerns and
perspective pretty closely represent my interests as well.  And I think it's
a mistake to frame the conversation as a "tourist" model vs a "walled
garden" model even hypothetically, since as far as I can tell, we are much
more likely to see hybrids of the two than any pure implementation of either
in the ecosystem of worlds that Cristina rightly points out are already
developing.  In any case, a protocol that assumes only one world seems on
its face of very little value to _anyone_ if the point is not to have
interoperability between worlds using the protocol!


Confused and befuddled,

- Chris/Fleep


Chris M. Collins (SL: Fleep Tuque)
Project Manager, UC Second Life
Second Life Ambassador, Ohio Learning Network
UCit Instructional & Research Computing
University of Cincinnati
406E Zimmer Hall
PO Box 210088
Cincinnati, OH 45221-0088
(513)556-3018
chris.collins@uc.edu

UC Second Life:   http://homepages.uc.edu/secondlife
OLN Second Life: http://www.oln.org/emerging_technologies/emtech.php