In any Metaverse has nothing to do with guns or emitters or cages. It has all to do with a mechanism of justice and freedom for all. When a sim owner can ban someone for any reason it is rather arbitrary, and at times, unfair. In the wild chaotic world no one has any way to adress injustice; there is no appeal to a, "higher order."
Wherever human beings congregate there will be conflict. The mechanisms in place to resolve conflict are, defined, as government.
Let us see what the base issue is here. The open grid is chaotic and free. Second Life is free, up to a point, but Lindens are in charge and make rules we may chafe at. The conclusion of the comparison between open grid and Second Life is open grid is more free. Am I seeing this correctly now?
Law and Order
Fri, 05/22/2009 - 19:25 — Insight HomewoodIn any Metaverse has nothing to do with guns or emitters or cages. It has all to do with a mechanism of justice and freedom for all. When a sim owner can ban someone for any reason it is rather arbitrary, and at times, unfair. In the wild chaotic world no one has any way to adress injustice; there is no appeal to a, "higher order."
Wherever human beings congregate there will be conflict. The mechanisms in place to resolve conflict are, defined, as government.
Let us see what the base issue is here. The open grid is chaotic and free. Second Life is free, up to a point, but Lindens are in charge and make rules we may chafe at. The conclusion of the comparison between open grid and Second Life is open grid is more free. Am I seeing this correctly now?