Second Life Takes on Darfur Conflict
Cambridge, Mass.-based Lichtenstein Creative Media, an independent
media production company, organized a Second Life exhibit entitled "Our
Walls Bear Witness -- Darfur: Who Will Survive Today?"
The exhibit was unveiled by Farrow, who works as a UNICEF
goodwill ambassador; John Heffernan, director of the Genocide
Prevention Initiative for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's
Committee on Conscience; and Ron Haviv, the award-winning
photojournalist whose images of Darfur were on display.
"The mantra of our family is that with knowledge comes
responsibility," says Farrow. "I've been to the region three times, but
I don't go just for me to understand. The whole idea is that I've had
the privilege to pass on the knowledge." Farrow says Second Life is a perfect forum for disseminating
what's she learned, because the virtual world extends around the globe.

By Robert Holden
TheStreet.com Virtual Reporter
1/10/2007 5:18 PM EST
A virtual world rally against the Darfur conflict
was held in Second Life Tuesday, with actress Mia Farrow speaking on
the importance of educating residents about the struggle in Sudan and
what could be done to end the crisis.
"I have a moral responsibility to transmit what I've witnessed," says Farrow. "
[Second Life]
provides a unique opportunity to convey what I know to be so, with the hope that I can pass on this knowledge to others."
Heffernan
adds that Second Life "really allows us to build a subcommunity. It's
far more interactive than a regular press conference. This
back-and-forth is critical in helping to inform each other."
Heffernan, who helped organized the event, says the goal was to
reach out to "anyone and everyone. Second Life is something that hasn't
been tapped yet. There is a multiplier effect. It's critical for us to
reach out to as many people as possible. Bill Lichtenstein is founder and president of Lichtenstein Creative Media. A former producer for ABC, "20/20," "World News Tonight" and "Nightline," he said the event was better than he could have expected.
"It was quite a view from the stage," Lichtenstein said, adding
that 65 avatars were present at the event. "We really see this as the
new public media, and we hope to do a lot more."
Second Life, the 3-D virtual environment created by San
Francisco-based Linden Lab, is populated by both individual users and
companies. While residents are creating 3-D identities in order to
design and sell goods in this virtual world for real money,
corporations such as Dell (DELL - news - Cramer's Take - Rating), Sears Holdings (SHLD - news - Cramer's Take - Rating) and Cisco (CSCO - news - Cramer's Take - Rating) are making a big push into the burgeoning world.
In the real world, photographs of Darfur taken by Haviv were
projected onto one side of the Holocaust Museum during Thanksgiving
week. The replication of this in Second Life includes those same
photos, as well as video of the real-life event.
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Posted by: Magin Fernandez | January 23, 2007 at 05:25 AM