FWD: Research on Virtual Punishment

From: Alexander 'Sasha' Chislenko (sasha1@netcom.com)
Date: Thu Sep 26 1996 - 23:00:50 MDT


I am forwarding this to the extropian list on request of
Richard MacKinnon <spartan@shell.portal.com>; hope you will find
his work of interest. Please do not distribute it beyond the list.

Sasha.

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Greetings! I'm inviting you to participate on the all-star, rapid-strike
ad hoc reviwing committee for my upcoming paper "Punishing the Persona:
Correctional Strategies for the Virtual Offender" to be published as a
chapter in _The Undernet_: Internet and the Other (Steven Jones, ed.) Sage
Press.

This paper constitutes the third part of my research trilogy investigating
governance, crime, and punishment in virtual systems. The other parts are:

"Searching for the Leviathan in Usenet" in _Cybersociety: Computer-Mediated
Communication and Community_ (1995), Steven Jones (ed.), Sage Press.

"The Social Construction of Rape in Virtual Reality" in _Network and
Netplay: Groups on the Internet_ (forthing in 1996), Fay Sudweeks, Margaret
McLaughlin, and Sheizaf Rafaeli (eds.), MIT Press and the Association for
the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI).

If you are interested in commenting on the current draft of "Punishing the
Persona," your "rapid-strike" response is urged, otherwise I may not be able
to address your comments until another project (PtP, version 2.0??).

The secret URL for the paper is:

http://www.portal.com/~rich/texts/punish.html

You may circulate the paper to others who may wish to comment, but the
purpose of the "secret URL" is to discourage mass distribution. This is
just a draft. I don't want people archiving an unfinished product.

Next is a little blurb about followed by the paper's abstract. I hope to
hear from you soon.

Thanks in advance,

--Rich
                                     BIOGRAPHY

                  Richard MacKinnon (http://www.portal.com/~rich/) is a
            political scientist in the Government Department and the
            Advanced Communication Technologies Laboratory (ACTLAB) at
            the University of Texas at Austin. As a former police
            officer, he is able to draw on his law enforcement
            background to inform his theories for addressing computer-
            mediated crime and virtual offenders. His research
            interests are in the political anthropology, cultural
            studies, and governance of virtual environments. Currently,
            he is co-developing _honoria in ciberspazio_, a cyberopera
            about net.relationships and fleshmeets. He spends most of
            his online time dwelling in a community called Cybermind and
            after spending several years in Silicon Valley, he now lives
            in Austin.
               ------------------------------------------------------

                                      ABSTRACT

                  The development of cybersociety poses significant
            theoretical and socio-political challenges attributable to a
            social space populated by "bodyless" beings. This chapter
            explores the phenomenon of bodylessness and its
            ramifications for the criminal corrections process. In the
            case of a well-known virtual rape, the perpetrator's account
            was deleted following a meeting of the virtual community's
            members. This virtual execution of his online persona is
            rigorously analyzed to determine if punishment of virtual
            bodies is a suitable means for meting out virtual
            jurisprudence. Guided largely by Foucault's insight into
            non-corporal or bodyless punishment, a standard of "just
            adjudication" is developed to insure that the punishment
            fits the crime. In part, this standard directs punishment
            for virtual offenses primarily towards the virtual body.
            Accordingly, offline offenses ought to be directed primarily
            towards the user. To this end, a classification scheme is
            proposed to differentiate virtual offenses from conventional
            computer crimes. Three cases are examined in light of this
            classification and standard. They are the "rape of legba;"
            the University of Michigan student, Jake Baker, who was
            arrested and expelled for his Usenet posting of a "sex
            fantasy;" and Kevin Mitnick, the infamous hacker accused of
            committing several computer-related crimes. It is hoped
            that the guidelines developed herein for adjudicating
            computer-mediated offenses will insure that the punishment
            delivered is commensurate with the crime. (Approximate
            length: 15,000 words).

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Richard MacKinnon http://www.portal.com/~rich/
Government Department mailto:spartan@gov.utexas.edu
Advanced Communication Technologies Laboratory (ACTLAB)
The University of Texas at Austin
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Sep:Houston;Oct:San Francisco;Nov/Dec:Primm,NV/Perth
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