Details
April 24 - 25, 2009, 8:00am - 5:00pm
DATE: April 24-25, 2009
LOCATION: Stanford Law School
Machinima.
...It has been hailed as the art form of the 21st century.
...It is redefining music videos.
...And reinventing the videogame.
...It might be the future of cinema.
But there's a catch: if you make machinima, you might be breaking the law.
Or are you?
Find out at Stanford University. "Play Machinima Law" from April 24-25, 2009. This two-day conference will cover key issues associated with player-generated, computer animated cinema that is based on 3D game and virtual world environments. Speakers include machinima artists/players, legal experts, commercial game developers, theorists, and more. Topics include: game art, game hacking, open source and "modding," player/consumer-driven innovation, cultural/technology studies, fan culture, legal and business issues, transgressive play, game preservation, and notions of collaborative co-creation drawn from virtual worlds and online games. Films will be shown throughout the conference, including: Douglas Grayeton's Molotov Alva and His Search for the Creator by and Joshua Diltz' Mercy of the Sea.
For more information and to register, visit http://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/playmachinima .
Related Media
- Introduction/Welcoming Remarks
- Machinima 101: Making Movies in Game Worlds
- The Rules of Play: The Role of the EULA and other issues in Machinima Creation and Distribution
- The Rules of Play: Copyright and Fair Use in Machinima
- Machinima in Game Preservation: A Fair Use Activity?
- Conference Closing Remarks
Contact
tech@law.stanford.edu
tech@law.stanford.edu
Admission
Please visit cyberlaw.stanford.edu/
playmachinima for admission and registration details.