Productive players
online computer games' challenge to conventional media forms

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Humphreys, Sal (Author)
published: 2005
Part of: , Erschienen in: Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, volume 2 / 2005, number 1, pp. 37 - 51. [ISSN: 1479-1420; 1479-4233]
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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Item Description: freier Zugang
Physical Description: 24 pp
Language: English
Part of: , Erschienen in: Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, volume 2 / 2005, number 1, pp. 37 - 51. [ISSN: 1479-1420; 1479-4233]
Subjects:
Collection: Datenbank Internetquellen
Table of Contents

"The online multi-user game is an exemplar of the emergent structures of interactive media. Social relationships and community networks are formed, and developer/player relationships are negotiated around ongoing development of the game features and player created content. The line between production and consumption of the text has become blurred, and the lines between social and economic relationships must be redrawn. This article explores these relationships, using EverQuest as a case study. It suggests that the dynamic, mutable, and emergent qualities of the online multiplayer game exceed the limits of the reifying processes embodied by copyright law and content regulation regimes." [Information des Anbieters]

Why Computer Games?; What’s new about EverQuest and its genre?; Productive Players; Implications: intellectual property, regulation, commerce and culture; How far can Intellectual Property take us?; The regulation of social space; Power and free labour; Conclusion;