Difference between revisions of "Rape In Cyberspace"

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== LambdaMOO==
 
== LambdaMOO==
The unprovoked attack described in “A Rape in Cyberspace” took place in the virtual reality of LambdaMOO, a text-based online community which is an extension of MUD, a multi-user dimensions computer game<ref name = "Danaher">Danaher, John. “The Law and Ethics of Virtual Sexual Assault.” Research Handbook on the Law of Virtual and Augmented Reality, 21 Dec. 2018, pp. 363–388.</ref>. Players interacted with each other, objects and locations by using avatars. Players are given the freedom to customize the text description of their avatars any way they would like to with the @describe me command<ref name = "Dibble"></ref>.
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The unprovoked attack described in “A Rape in Cyberspace” took place in the virtual reality of LambdaMOO, a text-based online community which is an extension of MUD, a multi-user dimensions computer game<ref name = "Danaher">Danaher, John. “The Law and Ethics of Virtual Sexual Assault.” Research Handbook on the Law of Virtual and Augmented Reality, 21 Dec. 2018, pp. 363–388.</ref>. Players interacted with each other, objects and locations by using avatars. Players are given the freedom to customize the text description of their avatars in any way they would like to including their preferred gender and outward appearance <ref name = "Dibble"></ref>.
  
 
==Summary==
 
==Summary==

Revision as of 01:30, 15 March 2019

"A Rape in Cyberspace, or How an Evil Clown, a Haitian Trickster Spirit, Two Wizards, and a Cast of Dozens Turned a Database into a Society" is an article written by journalist Julian Dibbell[1]. The article was first published in The Village Voice in 1993 and later incorporated into Dibbell's book titled My Tiny Life which recounts his experiences and observations from his time on LambdaMOO.

The article describes one of the first widely known instances of virtual rape that occurred online. The incident occurred on the platform LambdaMOO and Dibbell details the aftermath and the consequences of the attack on the LambdaMOO virtual community in his piece.

LambdaMOO

The unprovoked attack described in “A Rape in Cyberspace” took place in the virtual reality of LambdaMOO, a text-based online community which is an extension of MUD, a multi-user dimensions computer game[2]. Players interacted with each other, objects and locations by using avatars. Players are given the freedom to customize the text description of their avatars in any way they would like to including their preferred gender and outward appearance [1].

Summary

The Attack

That night in March, the avatar Mr. Bungle entered Living Room #17, a very popular meeting site on LambdaMOO, and forced two other players, Legba and Starsinger, to perform explicit and sexual acts. Mr. Bungle was able to force these actions upon other players through the use of a voodoo doll, a subprogram that enables the user to override controls and so statements written by one user appear to be attributed to another user[3]. As a result, an avatar does and says things that the avatar’s user did not intend or want their avatar to do. Mr. Bungle with the help of his voodoo doll subprogram was able to manipulate and control the actions of the other players even when he was in an entirely different room. The attack lasted until someone summoned a wizard named Zippy, a player with administrator level access, who was able to cage Mr. Bungle. The caging caused Mr. Bungle to lose access to the LambdaMOO community without the deletion of his avatar or account, thereby end his attack on the community that night[3].

Community Response

Consequences

Ethical Implications

External Links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Dibbell, Julian. "A Rape in Cyberspace." The Village Voice. 21 December 1993
  2. Danaher, John. “The Law and Ethics of Virtual Sexual Assault.” Research Handbook on the Law of Virtual and Augmented Reality, 21 Dec. 2018, pp. 363–388.
  3. 3.0 3.1 http://refractory.unimelb.edu.au/2008/05/22/rape-and-the-memex-laurence-johnson/