CyberHumanRightsLaw

How Cyberlaw can advance human rights.

Recent Posts

  • Human Rights Law Topic At ID Mashup Conference
  • A good use of Anonymity: Tor Protects the Good Guys but Can Also Protect the Bad Guys:
  • Human Rights on a micro scale
  • It's a small world...
  • Other Places for CyberHumanRights Info...
  • You Too Can Try Hitler in Play Written By Lawyer
  • Buy Tee Shirts to show your support for Cyber Human Rights
  • The 3 blind mice....???
  • The Congress marches into the fray
  • And the counter responses are rolling in...

About

My Photo
Subscribe to this blog's feed
Add me to your TypePad People list

Categories

  • Human Rights News
  • Web/Tech

June 2006

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30  

Recent Comments

  • tolikimer on The Congress marches into the fray

Archives

  • June 2006
  • March 2006
  • February 2006
Blog powered by TypePad

Human Rights Watch News Releases

Human Rights Law Topic At ID Mashup Conference

What will protect the human rights and identity of people on the web?  Will it be the law or the code of the web?  Is code law?  These are some of the questions being addressed at the Identity Mashup Conference being given at the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School.  Check it out.

Icard_people

June 20, 2006 in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)

Using Tech to Increase Darfur Awareness

This is not about cyber law but I think it is still important and MMO games have attracted legal attention:
All Things Africa
February 08, 2006 - by Ian Bogost
Console & PC Games, Educational Games, Political Games

Africa MMOA few bits of Africa-related videogame news to report.

First, you can now play and vote for the four finalists in the MTV crisis in Darfur student game design contest, which we mentioned last year. The contest asked student teams to design a videogame to build awareness about genocide in Darfur, Sudan. The network is offering a $50,000 prize to develop the game, although the students don't get to develop it, but rather a professional agency. The students will be invited to New York to advise and participate. Anyway, you can play the finalist games and vote at www.darfurisdying.com. The games are a bit rough, more like prototypes, which is fine for the purposes of the contest. The games come from two USC teams, one Carnegie Mellon team, and one Digipen team. The design challenge of a game about genocide in a historically complex region is not a simple one, and despite MTV's best intentions, I don't know that it's yet possible to make a game "to end the killing." Not in just a few weeks anyway.

Second, a studio called Rapid Reality (based here in Atlanta, no less) is apparently developing an MMO about Africa. According to this MTV article, the developers hope the game will increase awareness and interest in the much-ignored subcontinent. The project is a substantial one, promising ecological evolution and management, African languages (invented or real?), and even system requirements low enough to support most African cybercafes. The game is to be set in the 13th century, and the gameplay will revolve around African myth and

Unfortunately the game websites published in the article, Africa-MMO.com and africammo.com are reported "suspended" or "unauthorized," possibly from traffic clobbering due to Monday's /.ing. Clickable Culture points out that the game is in early stages, and the developer's intention to complete it in one year may be irrational. We'll have to wait for more details.

This is from a web site: http://www.watercoolergames.com/

February 14, 2006 in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)