Posts Tagged ‘social network’

JaneNation Takes Next Big Step

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

More than six-months in the making, Jane Nation is now live as a new community devoted to women.

Congratulations to the development team involved…lots of time spent and people involved to birth this baby.  Special thanks to Steven (a.k.a. “Stevie”), Mike (a.k.a. “Michelle”), Jen (a.k.a “Jen”), Erin (a.k.a. “Erin”) and Sean (a.k.a. “Shana”) who were the core development team.

jane_nation

Definitely check out the site.

It’s got a lot of information and conversations happening, geared to what may be going on in your life right now, so almost any woman would find a bunch of relevant content and a number of interesting women with whom you can connect.

Here’s the link.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.

Virtual Crime Begets Habbo Time

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

OK. The line’s starting to blur.

The headline in Ananova reads: “Teen Arrested for Virtual Theft”, and goes on to briefly describe the virtual world of Habbo Hotel, and a 17-year old who stole furniture valued at 2,500 pounds from members of the community.

Call it “Grand Theft Furniture.”

The furniture was originally purchased for game credits, but the credits are first paid for in cash, so it’s real theft. But the benefit to the thief is merely to spruce up their virtual hotel room and have a little more stroke in the virtual community.

I get it, but I don’t get it. Know what I mean?

I understand that peer esteem can be a powerful motivator, and might cause people to steal.

But for a virtual world to have this same influence, such that the kid in question would be motivated to build fake Habbo web sites and pfish identity information to then invade community members’ accounts and steal furniture is a bit tough to understand.

Maybe because the money is only pseudo-real, “coins” in the nomenclature of the game (that, in real money, cost about $.20 apiece), it doesn’t seem real. So then, it’s more of a prank than a theft.

But when you can’t outfit your hotel room the way you dream of because you don’t have enough real money to buy the game coins to in turn buy the furniture, you KNOW you’re commiting a crime.

So fine, it’s crime and should be prosecuted. My real conundrum, is how anyone can get so caught up in a virtual world to the point that they resort to real crime, make that FELONY crime, with nothing more than a “virtual” reward.

I think I may need to take a pill or something.

Here’s the article.

KidWithMatches is the personal blog of Pete Eberbach, VP Director of Online Marketing & Technology with St. John + Partners.


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