Friday, January 11, 2008

LL moving towards Linden being real currency.

Tell me, why is it that you need a real life bank charter.. to play with game currency?

Linden lab insists that the Linden is not real currency, yet here it is forcing numerous game world businesses to register. If the Linden is real, then LL is in violation of NUMEROUS rl securities statutes.

If it's not, how can they force these banks to get registered or stop operating in the manner they have stated including the requirement of an RL banking charter to allow them to operate?

Anyone smell a fish?

Thursday, January 10, 2008

More symptoms of a coming end?

Will this economic event, lead to the fulfillment of.. this?

Here's the old article in full since it's now only on google cache:

Saturday, 22 September 2007

Oh well.. And here I was hoping confidence was coming back to this market. The second half of September has been a perfect storm for the market. With VSTEX having 3 companies simultaneously default on shareholder trust and The Bank folding. What’s the relation? All 4 entities were strongly tied to the management and directorship of one Jasper Tizzy. Fortunately, some of us had insurance on our Deposits, and if Eliale Morigi of The Rock Insurance honors the claims then DGD’s going to be saved a pinch, but I can’t help feel concern for the hundreds of other investors undoubtedly uninsured and stricken by the incident. AIG, formerly the bank that backed the old AVIX exchange, has also highly restricted and appears to be defaulting on some withdrawals. The issue is so severe AIG was delisted from CAPEX for TOS violations under the new management’s guidelines.

Since June, Second Life has been averaging 1 bank default or failure a month. Are they all frauds or is there something much larger and more sinister at play on the horizon? Maybe there is more to this than simple fraud. I’ve done some analysis of the Second Life Economy and the results are very disturbing. It may even be pointing towards the potential end of product life cycle for Second Life as an entity... or that the virtual economy is about to hit a sustained depression.

Sources:
http://secondlife.com/whatis/economy-graphs.php
http://secondlife.com/whatis/economy_stats.php

I cite those early because I wanted you to get them up and review them with me as you read. There are some numbers in there that I view as critical landmarks that indicated the start of this economic crisis and the strength of its potential for deepening.

First, on the stats page you would note that from July to August in world business owners has declined. Secondly, land sales values are in steep decline. An average .5/acre drop is a huge move and likely to continue as LL continues to add land to the system. The rate of sale has also almost halved.

On the graphs page, and this is perhaps the most disturbing of all the data. The beginning of 2007 marked the largest recorded decline, which continues, in USD$ traded on the Lindex in over a year. This means fewer people are buying lindens; less money is coming into the Second Life virtual economy. Will this reverse? That depends on how LL manages their marketing but this event can be traced back to the changes in gambling policy and to the largest bank failure (Ginko) in SL. That chart is akin to the Virtual GDP. It marks the entertainment productivity of Second Life. When it goes in reverse, business will start to struggle and the magnitude of the reversal was not small.

What does this mean for your investment portfolio? It means that you have to be much pickier than usual. It means that you must watch even the most honest CEOs as a troubling environment can encourage more desperate behavior. It means more research time to make sure you’re not ripped off. It also means if you’re not diversified you’re welcoming a bullet to your virtual finances. Diversify even among banks.. and look into insurance if you can with someone with an established reputation of trust in SL insurance. Usually insurance will only take a fraction of your returns on a bank deposit and if the bank defaults it can be worth having assuming your insurer is a reliable vendor of such protection.

Risk is higher than ever, remember to be very careful about where you put your money and whom you trust. A key point to look for to measure trust is disclosure levels. An open book is much easier to discern the content of than a closed book. Find folks willing to talk about their corporate finances, which post clear reports consistent with their business operations. Also, remember that buying at any price is a sure way to lose, be very picky about your price targets for shares if you buy stock.

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Note, at this point the situation is now so severe with the policy, I advise against buying any stock or depositing in any bank. In fact, I'm going to start disassembling my links to prevent accidental deposits or investment encouraged by me.

Death/Rebirth of Capitalism in SL? Welcome back feudal era?

The economy is going to consist of mostly land, fashion, and clubbing. No more banks, no more stock exchanges or financing mechanisms in world for community development that do not have expensive real world licenses. Will it be the death of SL capitalism given the expense involved? Or is this a pre-text for something larger?

With the in-world only financial institutions out of the way, it paves the way for real legitimate institutions to move into Second Life, assuming they want to. I've heard some RL banks with limited in-world presences are having parties the day before this massive shut down event.. coincidence? .... I always have been one to say nothing is coincidental.

With the clarification and confusion that may result for people out of the way, the interface for real world business into second life will be much more clear. The question is, are people's rights being trampled? Second Life has yet to really define itself well. It exists somewhere between a game and reality. I think this decision represents a fundamental shift in the Opinion of the Lab in what they want Second Life to be. They do not want it to be as much a game as a Secondary Reality with expressive capability. But this opens other potential nightmares.

What does this decision mean to overall gaming programmers and the gaming community in Second Life? If SL finance is too risky, will Linden Lab ever decide first person shooter sims are "too violent"; for instance?

Some SL banks, which were not frauds, but had the trust of their depositors and were doing legitimate in-world business will not go without a significant cost to some in-world communities. I can't tell you how many people I know were relying on interest to pay tier. The financial cost goes far beyond the shut downs, we're looking at a large creative cost.

I do not foresee many SL banks or exchanges being able to act quickly enough to get real world banking licenses; especially with the cost involved of such licenses. And the time frame is so short that few will have enough time to import the funds to pay their depositors. One months linden purchase allowance is like 25,000 USD from my understanding. If this is true, getting enough cash in to cover the massive sums in some sl institutions is going to be neigh impossible. I hope the bank owners are getting on the horn with Linden as quickly as possible; otherwise the people most seriously hurt by this will be the ones who trusted the banks to hold their cash for them.

LL Pulling the Plug on all Virtual Banking/Trading.. etc.

Here's the policy link.

Wow, look like my blog is going to be short, brief and soon to be dated unless I cover land or fashion as it won't be long til no SL financial market will exist at all save the one in player's personal accounts. After all the rampant fraud in the SL financial community,LL has stepped in and said "sorry, no more banks". The unfortunate problem is that this mostly likely will impact depositors at those institutions far more than the bank operators themselves.

Personally, if I were LL, I would have opened a central virtual bank and regulated the markets so as to make more money off the venture and try to help improve sl communities, but that's not what happened. Of course, cost considerations had to be included so it's much easier just to say, "get rid of them all."

That said, it was a fun streak and if you knew who to invest with and did the safe smart thing you could make a profit; but most people are honestly clueless on how to judge such things in a virtual environment. It's so much more different than the real world and takes a lot of expierence so I can see where the Lab's coming from in their actions.

Anyhow, on 01/22/2007 every link and location on this blog will practically cease to exist because if you read the verbatim terminology of the disclosure anyone paying interest or offering a return on investment which is processed through an ATM for linden or any other currency would be shut down on that date; this would include any incorporated company on any sl exchange that paid a dividend. I'm even having to close up DGD, which is a bit painful, it had so much potential and the loss on investment value of the companies at liquidation cost is not a pretty picture at all. But one thing I can say, I'll be closing at higher than IPO value, and it makes me proud I can at least return some value to the SL community in less than 1 years term of operation, most real companies fail in that time.

It's a sad state of affairs that has lead to this day, but if you read my backlogs you can see that fraud is perhaps one of the most rampant dangers inside of second life. There's cheats and scams everywhere and many are not skeptical enough to dodge them all.

Hopefully things will change in time and virtual investing will become a way of the future, but for now... LL has deemed it just not plausible or viable, especially at some of the ridiculous rates promised.

If things change, of course, this blog will continue, but if it doesn't, this may be adieu.

Linden Lab instituting bank shutdown.

I just got back from a short personal holiday to discover LL is in the process of shutting down interest bearing institutions in SL that are not registered with a real world government, a bold move from being a a game to what I imagine is what LL is trying to achieve: the status of being a secondary reality existing atop our own. More news will be forthcoming with links as I uncover the details of what is hapening, but needless to say, market volatility will likely be at an all time high and as of yet, I'm not even certain the exchanges will survive.