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Theresa Tennyson

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    Oh, for cryin' out loud...

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  1. A lot of times I modify objects to take advantage of things that didn't exist as part of Second Life when that particular object was made - for instance, adjusting physics types on older objects to reduce their land impact. Advice: Stay out of Vegas...
  2. Is this line of text moral? How about this one? Or this? Words can come to mean different things than what their origins are, which is why definitions are more useful than etymologies: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/justification
  3. This is what the original post said: It's talking about justifying behavior by giving reasons for doing something. There's no "morality" implied. The last paragraph comes close, but "lame" and "nasty" don't quite make it all the way there. Injecting "morality" into the discussion is not helpful and turns the heat of the discussion up necessarily. So, if we are talking about reasons for doing something, we can look at them and see if those reasons are effective and/or proportional to what's being attempted without making a moral judgement. We avoid the whole "rights" discussion which can quickly become a hot mess when we're talking about imaginary objects painted onto computer screens with pixels.
  4. Let's say you own a factory that makes widgets. You're in an out-of-the-way place so you decide to put in a cafeteria for your workers. That means you need to buy kitchen equipment and food, and hire cooks and managers to run it. All in all, the cafeteria operation is losing money because the audience isn't that big and small operations are inefficient, and nobody working there is making a single blessed widget for you to sell, which is your real business. If you could get outside people to come to eat at the cafeteria, there's more of a chance it'll become a profit center than a liability, but you'd need to push the food thing even harder than you're already doing, meaning spending more money up front on the cafeteria and the staff will still not be making your widgets. But, if you sold the cafeteria to an outside restaurant company it could be run more efficiently because that company already has the knowhow, staff and suppliers. That's basically what happened here.
  5. Two people so far. As far as "not complaining," we're not having much luck at all.
  6. And they've been doing it for over twenty years. (On both sides.)
  7. If that was going to happen it could have happened already. Second Life is/was still dependent on credit card companies for money coming in and Paypal, etc. for money going out.
  8. Let's look at this another way... It sounds like you have a specific plan to do something. Tell us what it is and we can give you information on how to find land that will work to do that. You're acting as if the auction is the only way to get Mainland, which you might think from reading the Second Life website, but most Mainland that changes hands is bought from private owners or it's abandoned land that's purchased directly from Linden Lab.
  9. Theresa Tennyson mutters, "What Second Life really needs is an automatic knickers-untwister."
  10. Aaaaaannnndddd we're right back to where we started IF there's such a thing as "adult"-RATED furniture (which there isn't but we're pretending) THEN it's not allowed in M-RATED regions ALREADY SO that won't change whether or not child avatars can enter M--RATED regions.
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