Et cetera

Game Developers are Just Like Musicians – An Australian Example

A little follow-up to Parkers post about independent game development. Last week I attended the Dissecta talk at the State Library of Victoria. Damian Scott, founder and CEO of Primal Clarity, gave an insight into the scope and potential that the Australian independent game scene has to offer.

Primal Clarity are currently working on Imperial League, a violent first person sports game based on the Unreal engine. They're planing to release the game for free. Then after one year, once everyone is – hopefully – hooked they're going to introduce leagues and access to statistics. Charging for this feature is how they plan to make their money.

This move is inspired by the organisation of real-world sports: It only becomes real fun once your team beats the others. It's also a perfect example of how to utilise an add-on content model, in which the initial game experience is free but you can buy upgrades or customization for a price.

-Jens

Back to Down Under

I'm on my way Australia again. After a twelve hour flight from Frankfurt I currently get to spend some time on the Singapore airport, getting ready for another nine hours of flying.

So what brings me to the antipodes? Mainly research for my Ph.D. (which, I might add, is financially supported by the German Academic Exchange Service).

As some readers might know I'm looking into the differences of digital game discourses in Germany and Australia and how these relate to the socio-cultural history of both countries – an old "Kulturnation" such as Germany obviously has a different attitude towards mass media – and therefore digital games – than a young nation such as Australia.

One part of the plan is to make the work I've completed so far more coherent and factor in some of the advice fellow students gave me or that I received at conferences.

Moreover, I'm planning to look deeper into game discourses in Australian media; something that I obviously have done already but something that I feel I need to elaborate on – especially now that I had a chance to do some more research in Germany that brought my attention to angles I didn't consider before.

E.g. discourses about digital games in Germany until the early 1990s were often embedded in a broader discussion about the (supposedly negative) impact of computers. In no Western country the fear of rationalisation, surveillance and reduction to binary thinking by means of cold, soulless technology was as pronounced as in Germany.

Accordingly computers and digital games, similar to film, were confronted with antimodern, anti-capitalistic, anti-American sentiments, independent of their content. They were regarded as escapist trash that threatened national cultural assets as well as creativity and fantasy, two of the main pillars of artistic autonomy.

Will I find similar patterns in Australia? From what I've gathered so far, probably not. Australia always showed a very high acceptance of mass media and technology and "has yet to experience a moral panic generated by a politician around games to score some cheap political points with the conservative lobby."

This is a quote by my second supervisior, Brett Hutchins of Monash University whom I'm looking forward to meeting to further discuss my work. Moreover I'm planing to see my old lecturer and friend Jason Nelson who always supported me generously; other people I'd like to meet include Helen Stuckey, Games Curator at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image and some members of the Australian game industry, but that will eventually depend on how the research goes.

If you happen to be a reader of blogcampaigning and live either on the Gold Coast or Melbourne drop me a line because it would be great to meet you too!

Ok, I gotta go, several more hours of hanging around at this aiport demand my attention...

-Jens

Discrimination? Blame your Genes

Bad genes? Too bad. In what is possibly the world's first case of gene discrimination, Australians were refused insurance because their genetic heritage looked like it could potentially cost insurance companies a lot of money.

When I read stuff like this I get the feeling that the future really has begun. Where's my hovercar?!

-Jens

Tagged Again!

It looks like Michelle has tagged me in one of those social media, blogging games. The rules of the game in this one are to post 7 personal things about yourself, and then tag seven other people. Since BlogCampaigning is a primarily written by both Jens and I (nobody has heard from Espen in months), I decided that him and I would write 7 things about each other.

Parker Mason's 7 Things About Jens "Schredd" Schroeder:

1.) Easy, ladies! No matter how much you love his greasy hair and thick German accent, Jens is fully committed to his girlfriend Jenna. They met in Australia, and he's going to visit her there for three months this spring.

2.) Jens once told me the funniest story that I've ever heard. It was so funny that I laughed about it for two hours before I fell asleep laughing. When I woke up in the morning, the first thing I thought of was the story and I laughed for another two hours. I couldn't even eat breakfast, and when I ran into Jens at school later that day I started laughing again. The only reason I'm not retelling it here is because you need to hear it from Jens. If you ever meet him, buy him a beer and ask him to tell you "the story."

3.) Jens isn't very good at any of the Guitar Hero games.

4.) He is, however, one of the world's foremost experts on the subject of video games of the 80s from communist Germany.

5.) He is a member of the Turbojugend, which is the fan club for a Norwegian punk band called Turbonegro. In an age where most people don't even know anyone that owns a jean jacket anymore, Jens wears his Turbojugend jean jacket regularly and proudly.

6.) The posts Jens writes for BlogCampaigning need to be edited prior to going live so that I can make sure there isn't any offensive content. You'd be surprised at how necessary this step is.

7.) Once Jens hit a guy with his car and broke the guy's leg. However, even the injured party agreed that it wasn't Jens' fault.

Jens Schroeder's 7 Things About Parker Mason:

1.) When a girl in Sydney took a picture of her friends with Parker accidentally in the background she told everyone not to worry because she had Photoshop and could easily remove him from the photo. Parker was slightly offended.

2.) While working at the same company as my girlfriend, Parker tricked her into calling the Australia Zoo and asking to speak to "Steve Orwin." This was shortly after Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin, founder of the Australia Zoo,  passed away as a result of stingray-related injuries. (Parker's note: it isn't like that was the ONLY joke I played on Jenna while we worked together - she should have seen it coming.)

3.)  The only German words that Parker knows are swear words and dirty phrases that I taught him.

4.) Parker once lost his patience when trying to explain the concept of "poetic terrorism" to a very nationalistic Chinese classmate. To bridge the cultural divide, Parker delivered an impromptu lecture on the topic to his classmate then made him watch Fight Club.

5.) He lived in Japan for a year.

6.) He never got me into surfing and the amount of sport he does never fails to amaze me. Then again when it comes to sports I'm incredibly lazy.  (Parker's note: when it comes to everything but video games and his studies Jens is incredibly lazy)

7.) His reaction to the news that I was awarded a research scholarship for a trip to Australia was full of colorful language, and driven by jealousy. He also likes to call me schlampe,  which is German for "b*tch." (Parker's note: really? I always thought it was a term of affection. But considering number 5 on your list, that makes sense)

In short, the two of us are glad that we met while attending school in Australia a few years ago and like being in touch on a regular basis as we draft the occasional post for BlogCampaigning. We hope you enjoyed this behind-the-scenes look at the BlogCampaigning editorial board.

Who are we tagging? How about:

Chris Clarke, Rick WeissAmanda LairdThe Berling ImageMalte and Anthony, Claudio, and Tzero.

-Jens and Parker

A Liberal Democracy on Par With China and Saudi Arabia: Australia's 'Net Filter Plan

The internet: decentralised, largely unregulated, not belonging to anyone, knowledge flowing freely. Australia: Traditionally having one of the strictest censorships of a liberal democracy, banning R18+ video games and behind pretty much everyone else in terms of broadband speeds. How do these two mix? Exactly… The Australian Government under Kevin Rudd plans to impose a mandatory filter for all internet users that will block sites found on the secret Australian Communications and Media Authority blacklist and blacklists held by other countries. The cost: AUS$189 million. The result:

Laboratory test results released in June by the Australian Communications and Media Authority found available filters frequently let through content that should be blocked, incorrectly block harmless content and slow network speeds by up to 87 per cent.

Where to begin… First of all there's the technical aspect: All the experts might want to read this piece on Arstechnica, which in very technical terms explains why this scheme is doomed to fail; for the rest of us there's this Register article pointing out some of the issues encountered with censorship software in other parts of the world:

Problems with "socialism" were highlighted in a piece this week in the Australian Daily Telegraph, which gleefully pointed up the link between Labour and male impotence. Apparently, filters in other countries have hit problems with their ideology for the simple reason that it also contains the word "cialis" – an anti-impotence drug frequently promoted via spam email.

They also cite a story told by former Communications Minister Helen Coonan about the time when she attempted to order some strawberry muffins online. Her department’s filter system took exception to her use of "muff" – and the order did not go through.

Similar issues have occurred over the years in the UK with home-grown filter software that is not fully thought through. In one case, an Insurance company was rather surprised to find that after implementation of its in-house filtering system, direct mail campaigns to Essex, Sussex and Middlesex ceased entirely – as did communication with the inhabitants of Scunthorpe.

A couple of years back, respondents to a Home Office Consultation in the UK were surprised to find some submissions automatically rejected by a filtering system set up in one part of that Department. The consultation was on the subject of extreme pornography – and the filter took exception to receiving emails with the word "pornography" in the title.

Secondly there's the issue of free speech. As explained here the Government has been pursuing a two-tiered scheme. The first tier would be a "clean feed" that filters porn and "illegal content," and it would be optional. The second tier would filter only "illegal content" and would be mandatory for all Australians. In short: Australians won't be able to opt out of the government's Internet filtering initiative.

AussieFilter

This of course raises the question: What defines "illegal"? Apparently only half of the - secret and unaccountable - ACMA blacklist consists of child porn while the rest is mainly X-rated porn and sexual fetish material. And of course the calls for more are coming in: A statement by Family First member Steve Fielding indicates that any material rated above R 18+ (including X 18+ and "refused classification") should fall under the mandatory blacklist and could not be accessed through any Australian ISP. Such material is currently legal for Australian adults.

And it doesn't stop at porn:

"Any group with an axe to grind and political clout will be lobbying the Government to blacklist websites which they object to," EFA spokesman Dale Clapperton said.

(…)

Greens Senator Scott Ludlam expressed similar concerns when grilling Senator Conroy in Senate Estimates last week.

He said all sorts of politically sensitive material could be added to the blacklist and otherwise legitimate sites - for example, YouTube - could be rendered inaccessible based on content published by users.

"The blacklist ... can become very grey depending on how expansive the list becomes - euthanasia material, politically related material, material about anorexia. There is a lot of distasteful stuff on the internet," Senator Ludlam said.

Will disagreeable Wikipedia articles be banned? Reports by the opposition which highlight the failures of the Government in charge? Articles denying climate change? Where do extremist views start and stop?

Then there's potential of Big Content throwing another hissy fit about piracy: Will it be ringing up the Aussie government soon to have tracker sites added to the blacklist?

As Michael Malone, managing director iiNet, puts it:

"[This] is happening in two other countries - China and Saudi Arabia, that's who he's [Communications Minister Stephen Conroy] lined himself up with."

Colin Jacobs, chair of the online users' lobby group Electronic Frontiers Australia has another evil example at hand:

"I'm not exaggerating when I say that this model involves more technical interference in the internet infrastructure than what is attempted in Iran, one of the most repressive and regressive censorship regimes in the world."

In short: The scheme is expensive, won't work technically, abuses of civil liberties, impairs free speech and makes an abysmally slow internet even more slower.

No wonder that, except for some fringe groups who would like to push their moral agenda onto the rest of the Australian people, no one likes the idea.

The head of one of Australia's largest ISPs has labelled the Communications Minister the worst we've had in the past 15 years while political activists GetUp have raised over $30,000 in less than a day to support their fight against the filter.

Ed Coper, campaigns director at GetUp, said the response to the anti-censorship campaign had been "astronomical" and "quite unprecedented".

Almost 80,000 people have signed GetUp's petition and the organisation has created a widget that website owners can embed on their sites, which allows their visitors to sign the petition and obtain more information about the filtering plans.

Even children's welfare groups and NSW Young Labor has criticised the Government's filtering plans. Young Labor passed a motion rejecting the mandatory scheme and calling on Senator Conroy to adopt a voluntary opt-in system whereas Holly Doel-Mackaway, adviser with Save the Children, the largest independent children's rights agency in the world, said educating kids and parents was the way to empower young people to be safe internet users.

She said the filter scheme was "fundamentally flawed" because it failed to tackle the problem at the source and would inadvertently block legitimate resources.

So what does the Government do? Right, it tries to bully critics into silence, accuses them of supporting child pornography, and its pressing ahead with trials but doesn't give any information about the conditions surrounding them…

-Jens

Radio Daze

Over the past few weeks, I've been "time-shifting" the posts on this blog by writing them one one date and setting them up to publish anywhere from a day to a week later. Don't tell anyone, but I used to do something similar when I was working at Radio Metro 105.7 (listen to them online here) while living in Surfers Paradise, Australia.

As part of one of my Master of Arts and Media degree, I had to spend a certain amount of hours working in a media organization for one of my classes. Thanks to my well-connected professor, I was able to get a position as the morning traffic guy for a 105.7, a local radio station.

Two mornings a week, I had to be in the studio by 7am to prepare for the 730am traffic report. It was fun, but it got in the way of prime surfing time (the wind and waves are the best between about six and eight in the morning). Eventually, I managed to get out of traffic report duty and started doing the news on Sunday afternoons.

What this involved was getting into the radio studio about an hour before my 4 o'clock broadcast time to read the day's news and put the appropriate info into the station's news template: a world news story, a  Australian news story, a local news story, some sports items, two entertainment or celebrity tidbits, the odd news of the day then banter with the DJ.

Most days, I wouldn't feel like hanging around until 4 to read the news, so the DJ and I would just prerecord it.

On one such day, I woke up at around 10 and hit the beach with only the magnetic keycard for the radio station in the pocket of my boardshorts and my board under my arm. After a couple of hours of surfing, I strolled over the radio station and got ready to read the news. Since I was still soaking wet and sandy from the beach I had to do the news standing up and it felt like the BBC announces in their tuxes from the golden years of radio broadcasting. I was just a little less formal.

My apartment in Surfers Paradise, Australia: on the Radio Metro building behind me, the beach only a few blocks away.

Later that afternoon, I went to a barbecue party at a friend's house and had a couple of beers. A few minutes after 4pm, I was introduced to one of my friend's friends who had just arrived at the party.

"Your voice sounds really familiar," she said. "I think I just heard you on the radio on my way over here."

I told her that it was indeed me and, confused, she asked how I'd gotten to the party so quickly.

"These are the mysteries of radio," I told her, and left it at that.

These days, it is just the mysteries of blogging and not enough surfing.

-Parker