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[Internet]| Thursday 3rd April 2008 |
The project is in testing and will go live within several weeks. It marks a new focus by Second Life's parent company, Linden Lab, on providing software and services to corporate customers who want to use the virtual world for collaboration and teleconferencing.
IBM employees will be able to move freely between the public areas of Second Life and private areas which are hosted behind IBM's corporate firewall.
This will enable the company to have sensitive discussions and disclose proprietary information without having the data pass through the servers of privately held Linden Lab.
IBM has long been one of the corporations most engaged with
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More than 6,000 IBM employees have created avatars, and the company signed a pact with Linden Lab last year to explore interoperability between different virtual worlds.
The project is structured as a joint development agreement, and no money will change hands, according to Colin Parris, IBM's vice president for digital convergence. "We see a need for an enterprise-ready solution that offers the same content creation capabilities but adds new levels of security and scalability," he says.
After an initial phase of using the private Second Life areas internally, IBM will let its own customers access the privately hosted regions. "We're doing this internally, and we're building the right kind of enterprise-grade solution," Parris adds.
Second Life is increasingly used by corporations and other organisations instead of conference calls and meetings, but adoption has been hindered by concerns about the platform's stability and security.
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