I'm still not clear as to exactly what MUD money would purchase. In a MOO, such as MediaMOO or BayMOO, I can't conceive of what anyone could "buy"
Well, this is true of MOOs in general but not MUDs most of which are D&D-style combat games, wherein virtual money already plays a strong role; many muds have banks, which have fees, interest rates, etc., and loan sharks abound. RL money does not come into it, and barter is usually quite acceptable. I agree that the whole idea is rather trivial, but it would seem to be a good test, at least: see if MUDdom will cooperate enough to have a networked form of MUDbucks. I don't think most MUDs would go for the players being able to buy power(s) outright, but goods should not be a problem. Anyway, the difference between the typical MOO and typical MUD community is very great in many ways and it doesn't do to conflate them.
Any system of monetary exchange that would involve manipulating quotas, or translating them into a kind of tradeable commodity would, I think, be vigorously resisted by most MOO wizards. "I'll help you code that virtual Harley if you'll pay me two quota" would be antithetical to the whole spirit of cooperation I've seen in most (though not all) MOOs. In addition, it would be an ironic commentary on the old cyberpunk "Information should be free!" if Joe/Jane MOOwhiz sets up shop as a for-hire expert in coding, amassing virtual capital off of newbies.
The capitalists here probably think that's a great idea, though the LPF fans here would disagree. This strikes me as remarkably similar to a BBS- based idea that went around for a while, to have BBSbucks, that one could spend to get online time on any participating BBS. One got the bucks by uploading to file oriented boards, posting on msg. oriented boards, etc. Of course, sysops in general slammed the idea, since it was immediately obvious to most of them that people would manipulate the less popular and more open (by necessity) boards. People would call some newbie board, and upload garbage to it, knowing that the sysop would not say much about it, being in the process of trying to get new users and keep them, then take the electricash to the popular boards. If one looks at BBSs like countries, it would be as if they were 3rd world nations being farmed for their cheap resources and labour, and all the money goes out of the country to the Big Empires.
future monetary transactions on a global scale. And if, as part of your post suggests, RL money would be gratefully paid for increased power within a MUD -- shades of *Snow Crash*! And who would have guessed that it was cypherpunks in executive clothing that brought such a system into the MUD/MOO world.
Well, one can remove the necessity, for now, that RL money be paid. What then is the real objection? I can see nothing keeping the idea from working. As for the RL for digicash scenario, well *I* wouldn't play, having better things to waste money on, but if some will, why not? Why should MUD programmers and site providers have to do it all for free, while their game-programming counterparts in the online services rake in good salaries? At times I shudder to think what it's costing in bandwidth to keep all these NeTrek players going, night and day. Make them PAY a little for it (not much, but enough that they notice), place the financial burden where it belongs. Note: my commentary on MUD/MOO practices dates from 92, so it may be outdated by this point, seeing how fast that virtcom changes. -- -=> mech@eff.org <=- Stanton McCandlish Electronic Frontier Foundation Online Activist & SysOp NitV-DC BBS 202-232-2715, Fido 1:109/? IndraNet 369:111/1, 14.4V32b 16.8ZyX