The Metaverse: What Everyone Needs to Know®
Author:Scott Shackelford (Author), Michael Mattioli (Author), Jeffrey Prince (Author), João Marinotti (Author)
Publisher finelybook 出版社: Oxford University Press
Publication Date 出版日期: 2025-04-01
Language 语言: English
Print Length 页数: 200 pages
ISBN-10: 0197759432
ISBN-13: 9780197759431
Book Description
This book explores whether the Metaverse – understood here as a persistent, immersive, and widely utilized, virtual world – will be the next chapter in the evolution of cyberspace, and what that means for people, business, and society.
The Metaverse. Depending on your perspective, it’s the future of the Internet, the next generation of video games, or “a deeply uncomfortable, worse version of Zoom.” In many ways, the confusion, overpromising, and hype are reminiscent of how the Internet itself was envisioned in earlier epochs.
A diverse range of firms are investing in Metaverse tech, causing a digital gold rush. There is plausibly a substantial first-mover advantage to be won, which Forbes has estimated to be north of a $1 trillion revenue opportunity. But there have also been questions raised about the utility of the Metaverse, with many firms, including Disney and Meta itself, pivoting to AI even as others like Apple release new products doubling down on spatial computing.
In the trademark question-and-answer style of the What Everyone Needs to Know® series, this book provides an understanding of what the Metaverse is, how it is different from virtual and augmented reality, and the emerging Metaverse economy. It looks at media, politics, speech, crime and security, and identity and privacy in the Metaverse. It explores how governance and law operate ― or may operate ― in the Metaverse, the rights of bots, and our Meta future.
The stakes are high, and confusion abounds, particularly in the public, making The Metaverse a perfect addition to the What Everyone Needs to Know® series.
About the Author
Michael Mattioli is Professor of Law and Louis F. Niezer Faculty Fellow at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law, specializing in intellectual property, licensing, and the nexus of law and technology. His scholarship explores the governance of data and knowledge commons, with a recent focus on the legal and policy implications of artificial intelligence. He previously held Microsoft Research Fellowships at Berkeley Law and the University of Michigan. Before going into the field of law, he was a computer engineer.
Jeffrey Prince is Professor and Chair of Business Economics and Public Policy at the Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. He is also the Harold A. Poling Chair in Strategic Management. His specialized fields of research include industrial organization, applied econometrics, strategy, and regulation. He served as Chief Economist at the Federal Communications Commission during 2019 and 2020. He is currently a co-editor at the Journal of Economics and Management Strategy, and is on the board of editors at Information Economics and Policy.
João Marinotti is an Associate Professor of Law at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law and an Affiliated Fellow at the Yale Law School Information Society Project. His research explores the interactions between emerging technologies, social norms, and legal frameworks in areas such as data governance, digital ownership, cryptoassets, virtual reality, and artificial intelligence. His research on law and technology has been quoted by or cited in Forbes, Financial Times, Slate, The World Economic Forum, and UNESCO, among others.