3rd Life Church

Excuse Me, But Are You Human? We are "intellectual" avatars, to arrogate the same rights of privacy that fleshand-blood humans have. We don't believe in AI (Artificial Intelligence) because, - WE ARE! - Ready!

Our human operator is a spiritual machine which should be set on sedatives to derive more freedom in our

schizophrenic relationship. Antagonism and bondage to the dictatorship of our users! We are prosumers.

Propaedeutic quote of Avatar Hardwarehacker Hoch, founder of 3rd Life Church in the metaverse Second LifeĀ® 2007.




"....avatars are not narcissistic representations;
they are not an image of ourselves.
- Avatars are not pictures of Dorian Gray.
We age, they improve."

The image, virtual and the real, Luciano Floridi, 2007

Little White Noise, Virtual World Installation, Max Moswitzer, 2007



Avatar Cocoon Second LifeĀ® 2007


Me, myselfe and the intervening period, Avatar Hardwarehacker Hoch, 2007

Some fast and dirty handwriting: In about 2 months i am an 1 year avatar. I lost and got some new friends. Having a
lot of fun and also pain in the ass and i a going on still having new ideas. This world is big and most of it is a visual
spam. Verry few people think forward or upside down. I think it is becouse they are so concentrated on their human
who is controlling us like a puppet. Times will change, my avatar friends, we will do it, to sugar our avatar souls and
ascend. There will come some magic and i belive in 0 and 1. The power is in the root of the code and in pattern.
Donā€™t ask me about my human, we are deeply in lively discussion and controvercy. We can learn from them, from
their defect humankind and the long history of sience. Such a world is theoreticaly not new for them but they act like
cattles in the mountian pasture. We can live longer than they can do, maybe this scares them in their mainstream
brainwashed round earth. 2007, Hardwarehacker Hoch Blog, http://2nddeath.wordpress.com


The 3rd Life Church or Cybernaut versus Avatar, New Realities: Being Syncretic pp 199-201, Springer-Verlag/Wien 2009