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discovering games as expressive media

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FreePixel looks at video games as part of the moving image culture. Games are not movies. But games use moving image tradition in their presentation. That is why FreePixel offers a critical look at games and their expressive qualities that grow from the use of the moving image.

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[April 8th, 2009]

Play Machinima Law

Posted by Michael

Not a festival but possibly an even more important machinima event held at the Stanford Law School from April 24-25. Here is the official announcement:

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 the Stanford University “Play Machinima Law” event 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.

Register now at http://cyberlaw.stanford.edu/playmachinima

SPEAKERS

Julie Ahrens
Associate Director of the Fair Use Project at the Center for Internet and Society, Stanford Law School

Matteo Bittanti
Associate Researcher, Stanford Humanities Lab, Stanford University

Mimi Calter
Stanford University

Roxanne Christ
Partner, Latham Watkins

JoAnn Covington
Electronic Arts

Joseph DeLappe
Machinima Artist

Douglas Gayeton
Machinima Artist

Lauren Gelman
Executive Director, Center for Internet and Society, Stanford Law School

Clint Hackleman
Myndflame

Sean F. Kane
Manager, Intellectual Property Practice Group, Drakeford & Kane LLC

Kari Kraus
Assistant Professor, University of Maryland

Henry Lowood
Curator for History of Science & Technology Collections; Film & Media Collections, Stanford University Libraries

Jerome McDonough
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Shane M. McGee
Partner, Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP

Mark Methenitis
Vernon Law Group

Michael Nitsche
Assistant Professor, Georgia Institute of Technology

Matthew Skelton
Microsoft

Bernadette Swanson
Reference & Instruction Librarian, UC Davis

Jennifer Urban
Clinical Associate Professor Of Law; Director, Intellectual Property And Technology Law Clinic, University of Southern California Law School

Fred von Lohman
Senior Staff Attourney, Electronic Frontier Foundation

[Comments]

Comment from Michael
Time: July 18, 2009, 12:35 pm

The videos of the conference have been uploaded:

here
and
here

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