• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
The Metaverse Journal

The Metaverse Journal

Virtual Worlds Since 2006

  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
  • The Archive

Is Linden Lab up to the job of keeping younger teens safe in Second Life?

October 3, 2010 by Tateru Nino Leave a Comment

In some ways the decisions surrounding Linden Lab’s closure of Teen Second Life, and the plans for its teen users represent an almost perfect microcosm of Linden Lab process.

There’s the decision to close Teen Second Life, apparently made without consulting with … well, anybody at all. As a part of this, older teens (16-17 years old) will be migrated to the adult grid along with their elders, but under some restrictions that remain a secret at present, despite now being just a few weeks away.

There’s the much better decision to allow younger teens (13-15) to be allowed a form of restricted access to Second Life, in order for a number of worthy education, community and support programmes to continue. A decision which appears to have been grudgingly granted at the behest of programme providers, and which doubtless would have surfaced originally, if they had only been consulted.

Now it remains to be seen if Linden Lab can carry this off. A mix of teens and adults in Second Life can be a potentially volatile mix from a public-relations and media perspective. Reducing the risk of potential scandal will require the utmost care and attention-to-detail from Linden Lab as they prepare to migrate users.

Fortunately, most of the code required for younger teen users appears to already be a part of the grid systems, and has been mostly successful at keeping Teen Second Life and Second Life largely isolated from each-other so far. There’s certainly some expressing doubts that Linden Lab will be able to competently meet the challenge, as many feel that those levels of care and quality-assurance exceed the organisation’s capabilities.

The plan with younger teens is to restrict them to the estates of a sponsoring organisation or programme. Each of the younger 13-15yo teens will be signed on with a particular group, and allowed no access beyond that group. Adult members of the organisation will keep estate-controls tight, allowing only approved and authorised adults access. Additionally, younger teen accounts would not have access to the new Second Life marketplace on the Web.

Now, that’s good, but clearly it isn’t enough. Teens in Teen Second Life have thus far had much greater protections than this, being protected from messaging by adult accounts who weren’t currently logged into the teen estate (a very limited privilege), and unable to be sent content by adult accounts from outside of the teen estate.

Under the new system, adult accounts in the sponsoring group would clearly be able to bring content into the sponsoring estate from the broader grid of Second Life, or (while in the estate) give content to or instant-message a younger-teen account in their sponsored group. These are fine. What about instant-messages or inventory transfers from adult accounts outside of the sponsored estate, however?

If those were to be permitted, any teen could be sent prurient account or sexually harassed by any adult or prankster with a throwaway account who wished to do so. That’s a media scandal in the making right there, and there’s certainly a minority of people in the world who would choose just such tactics to cause one.

As I said, of course, the code exists now to prevent this inappropriate crossing of estate boundaries with respect to contact with younger-teens, if it is appropriately planned, carefully adapted and diligently tested, and if Linden Lab has even thought to do so.

The question is, is Linden Lab up to the job of keeping younger teens safe in Second Life?

Update (Lowell): On top of the Teen grid decision, Linden Lab have now announced a cessation of discounted pricing for educators purchasing full regions on the main grid. It’s hard to see a result other than less nuanced education projects as pricing forces them to Homestead and Open Space regions. More on this later.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Related

Filed Under: Education, General News, Op-ed, The Archive, Virtual Worlds

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. ToxicMenges says

    October 5, 2010 at 12:39 am

    It’s a huge mess waiting to happen. As someone who was directly in charge of the safety of teens in a virtual world environment (not a small one, I am talking the leader of the pack), experience tells me that this is a big bunch of lawsuits that will erupt all over LL’s legal desks.

    Loading...
    Reply
  2. ToxicMenges says

    October 5, 2010 at 12:39 am

    It’s a huge mess waiting to happen. As someone who was directly in charge of the safety of teens in a virtual world environment (not a small one, I am talking the leader of the pack), experience tells me that this is a big bunch of lawsuits that will erupt all over LL’s legal desks.

    Loading...
    Reply
  3. CaliburnS says

    October 5, 2010 at 11:31 pm

    Oh, smooth. First offer education a way to remain in touch with their clients (the students and other educators), then take away all financial incentive to stay and do so.

    Well I guess that solves THAT problem.

    Loading...
    Reply
  4. Baloo Uriza says

    October 6, 2010 at 7:47 am

    I gotta wonder if anybody realizes that Linden Lab isn’t your kid’s parents…

    Loading...
    Reply
  5. Catcollins says

    October 9, 2010 at 2:58 pm

    No LL is not prepared. LL are shitheads for even thinking this might work. Screw them and their grid.

    Loading...
    Reply

Leave a Reply to CatcollinsCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

More to See

Aussie rock / folk gig

January 11, 2007 By Metaverse Journal Editor

Beach party!

January 3, 2007 By Metaverse Journal Editor

Tags

ABC abc island addiction ageplay alternatives arts a year ago business community education event health humour interview landmark legal lindenlab linden lab LukeConnell machinima media merged metaplace Metrics music nonprofit Op-ed opensim ozco podcast politics research sex tateru telstra the watch tutorial twinity usability uwa vastpark whimsy world of warcraft WoW WSE

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

%d