It is billed as bigger than the Internet. Soon (probably sooner than anyone expected), we’ll all be living a second life in the immersive digital reality known as the Metaverse. Like the World Wide Web in the 1990s, it ushers in a wonderful new era of creativity and commerce, but it can affect technology ethics and user safety. The loot is certainly nice. So Facebook changed its name to Meta. But it’s also why the battle has erupted over who will ultimately own this new reality. Will it be decentralized and freewheeling, or highly curated and corporate? Will it be free, or will access, like Facebook and Gmail, be exchanged for personal data? Who protects privacy? Moderated a discussion with Magic Leap CEO Peggy Johnson at New Economy Gateway Europe. (Source: Bloomberg)
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