Second Life Experiences A Run On The Banks

from the virtual-depression dept

One of the aspects of Second Life that has gotten a lot of hype is the fact that it’s not just a virtual world, but a virtual economy as well, complete with trade, currency fluctuations and banking. That being said, people that have actually tried to engage in sophisticated financial activity (e.g. forms of arbitrage) have found in-game institutions to be unsatisfactory for their purposes. These problems seem to be spreading, as in-game banks that offered depositors sky-high interest rates on their Linden Dollars are experiencing what could be described as a ‘run on the bank’. It can’t be a surprise to the depositors that these institutions are having trouble remaining solvent, seeing as offered interest rates were in some cases near 100%. Those are the kinds of interest rates tend to be indicative of Ponzi schemes and other fly-by-night operations rather than stable banks. If anything, this raises more of a psychological question more than an economic one: why would people trust their money to a bank offering these kinds of rates when they almost certainly wouldn’t do so in the real world? Then again, these issues aren’t really unique to Second Life. France’s biggest bank, BNP Paribas, has just announced that it will freeze the assets of three major funds, as it struggles with issues related to the US mortgage market.

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Companies: second life

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Comments on “Second Life Experiences A Run On The Banks”

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7 Comments
Bob (user link) says:

This is just a long list of symptoms....

When Linden Lab, fearing the Justice Department of the US, decided to BAN Gambling, the “run” on the bank presented itself as just another symptom of the bigger problem with Second Life.

That problem is simply that Linden Lab, the owner/creator of Second Life, has been making one bad decision after another.

As Second Life has continued to grow in popularity and usage, albeit slowly, Linden Lab has continued to “Enhance” it’s product, but fails to do the same with the infrastructure on which it’s carried and the core program. Second Life has gone from a world of relatively non-annoying bugs, to a system that nearly imploded two weekends ago; it took Linden Lab over 48 hours to correct that issue, and then only temporarily.

Second Life is now congested with World stopping bugs that destroy “user created content” in which the World itself is supposedly built upon. The bandwidth that carries Second Life to the masses has been stretched to a breaking point with all these “enhancements” and recently was congested even more by adding VOICE into the World. While the VOICE is supposedly between only two people, if you enable Voice on your client, then you can listen in their conversations. This means the voice packets of ALL conversations are being broadcast to everyone and only “enabled” if it’s in “range”. This has caused even more lag and latency issues since Voice itself has gone Live. The World of Second Life itself continues to groan under the strain, and I feel, as many of the oldest members of the Second Life Community do, that Second Life will eventually become so bloated with “Enhancements”, bugs, and an un-retouched GRID, that one day it will just cease to operate.

Nasty Old Geezer says:

Re: This is just a long list of symptoms....

I have never usedjoinedvisited Second Life — but it sounds boring as watching paint dry. Why spend the time on pretending to do what I do for real?

THere was an SF story I read many years aog — have forgottten the name, author, etc. — but it involved a group of humans held in suspended animation. THey were induced to dream about economic what-if scenarios, and the operators of the project used the dreams as economic projections, under a Delphi principle. They were manipulating the real economy with the results.

Wonder if Linden Labs is doing any pattern analysis, data mapping, trend analysis, etc. on the activities in Second Life.

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