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Video, pics and notes from MacArthur Foundation event today

   

Jonathan Fanton, President of the MacArthur Foundation, and Philip Rosendale, CEO of Linden Labs, appeared in-world this morning in a packed-to-the-gills sim to talk about the future role of philanthropy in virtual worlds.  Truthfully, I didn't learn much that I didn't know before, but it was an important event nonetheless.

Here is a short video giving some of the flavor of the event, for those who weren't there. I'm sure that the foundation will be releasing a more complete report on the event, and follow-up activities shortly.  Keep an eye on their Digital Learning website or join their in-world group "MacArthur Foundation SL Events" to stay abreast of developments.

What follow are some additional notes and a couple pics from the MacArthur event...

There were a couple of hundred avatars crammed into the sim, many arriving as early as an hour ahead of time.  I was overwhelmed by the response, particularly since it was not the sexiest of topics.  But there they were, from as far way as Scotland and Japan.

A crowd of avatars at the SL MacArthur Event

The event began with a pre-recorded video message from Mr. Fanton projected on giant screens above the sim.  Then Mr. Fanton's and Philip Linden's avatars appeared in the center of the ring to have an audio discussion with each other. Then they took a few questions from the audience, which were submitted via text IM to a moderator. 

I got to ask Mr Fanton the following question: With a few exceptions, the philanthropic world has not been very good about incorporating Web 2.0 tech into their giving practices. What hope do you have that virtual worlds will be reacted to any differently?

He somewhat dodged the answer, saying that MacArthur wanted to learn how to work with virtual worlds, to convene people and to bring virtual projects into making real world change.

Jonathon Fanton addresses SL residents

Other points made by Mr. Fanton:

  • On education:  We have a whole area in education work where we want to understand how technology effects young people's learning.  What is the role of schools going forward.  So much time is spent online, playing video games, in virtual worlds, etc. I want to have a discussion about how schools should be redesigned.
  • On real world engagement: We want to learn how to connect SL residents to organizations working on real world in issues.  The International Criminal Court is one example. The ICC is a new institution started in 2002. The US should be a part of this court.  Might not there be a group in SL that could come together to educate itself about ICC and organize a campaign to persuade public and leaders that we should be part of this court.
  • On foundation's convening power: Foundations are good at convening people, at bringing people together with similar interests. I.e. young people interested in internships and connecting them with organizations that need them. Or convening conversations among different actors on important issues.
  • On credibility and reputation in virtual worlds: MacArthur is connected to massive networks on a number of issues. We know who is doing the best research, we do our own due diligence. We know which organizations you can trust. We are a resource bank for people in SL about where to go for credible information. Phillip Linden added that SL is enabling people to build systems for credibility that go beyond the real world. Look at Grameen Bank and how micro-lending is enabled by a network of trust. Virtual worlds can expand that in ways that are faster than the real world.
  • We want to work with people in SL who care about the issues we care about. Figure out what sensible policy is, both for non-profits and governments and beyond. We want to learn how MacArthur can play a constructive role in realizing idealism in SL.

Fanton noted that this was the beginning of a conversation and that other more issue-focused discussions would be announced in the near future.  I'm looking forward to it.

Additional articles and blog posts about the event:

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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Video, pics and notes from MacArthur Foundation event today:

» MacArthur Foundation: Virtual World Event on Philanthropy: Notes from Beth's Blog
I just came from an historic and ground breaking event. I don't know if I'm still shaking from the excitement or the hour long multi-tasking frenzy of listening to a live audio feed, seeing a blog.tv stream, reading a chat [Read More]

» [sl] The Philip Rosedale/MacArthur Foundation Conversation from Global Kids' Digital Media Initiative
To read the invitation about the Philanthropy in Virtual Worlds event, please go here. One teen quote in particular, from, Anthony Pomeray, summed up the effect the event had on many who participated: "After hearing the conversation Phillip had today,... [Read More]

Comments

Excellent notes and photos!

Photo Op. Film at 11. Oh, wait... :-)

Nice coverage. Replace Web 2.0 with SecondLife and you get a nifty speech for SecondLife. :-)

Great post and recap Rik!

If you want to read what teens had to say during the event you can read our blog post about it here: http://www.holymeatballs.org/2007/06/sl_locations_for_the_philip_li.html

It spurred the teens to respond to these issues and a comment from one teen in particular summed up the effect the event had on many of those who participated. "After hearing the conversation Phillip had today, I just feel like I want to be part of something to help mankind."

As the de facto administrator of the Security Fix blog, I've spent many an hour deleting spammy links left in the comments section -
- comments that usually lead back to the same kinds of Web sites you most commonly see advertised in junk e-mail.

As the de facto administrator of the Security Fix blog, I've spent many an hour deleting spammy links left in the comments section -
- comments that usually lead back to the same kinds of Web sites you most commonly see advertised in junk e-mail.

As the de facto administrator of the Security Fix blog, I've spent many an hour deleting spammy links left in the comments section -
- comments that usually lead back to the same kinds of Web sites you most commonly see advertised in junk e-mail.

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