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Meta-business: Sci-fi dreams or future reality

Meta-business: Sci-fi dreams or future reality

Published on the 24/11/2021 | Written by Heather Wright


Sci-fi dreams_Gartner

And the deepfakes threat…

Big tech might be buying into the metaverse big time, but ‘metaversial’ business is a very long way off.

That’s according to Gartner analyst Mark Raskino, who says he believes that while business will one day be conducted in a fully immersive 3D visual metaverse, that won’t be in the 2020s, or even in the 2030s most likely.

He likens it to business VR, which he says is ‘IT’s version of nuclear fusion energy’.

“The idea is incredibly seductive, it feels like it should work, and it seems like we are always less than a decade away from achieving it.”

“Huge amounts of R&D effort are poured into it and countless billions of investments over decades and still… and still… it is just around the corner out of reach.”

Certainly, big tech is throwing cash into the metaverse.

Facebook – which infamously is so invested in the metaverse that it has rebranded its business to Meta Platforms – Microsoft, Nvidia and others are betting big on the metaverse, serving up applications to provide enterprises with a door into what is essentially an immersive 3D mixed reality world.

Microsoft has announced Mesh for Microsoft Teams at its recent Ignite conference, allowing users to introduce personalised avatars to make meetings ‘more immersive’. Facebook meanwhile is offering up its Horizon Workrooms – VR meeting spaces for remote collaboration.

Collaboration is touted as a key early use for the metaverse in business.

Nvidia meanwhile has launched Omniverse Enterprise – an end-to-end collaboration and simulation platform – and announced Omniverse Avatar, which generates interactive AI avatars, and Omniverse Replicator which generates the data needed to train deep neural networks.

Jensen Huang, Nvidia founder, was touting the offering at GTC 2021, highlighting use cases including simulating digital twins of warehouses and factories, physical and biological systems, and the 5G edge.

Also being touted is business to consumer metaverse use – forget going into a physical shop, let’s try on that clothing digitally.

Raskino points to five reasons mass business VR, and the metaverse, won’t happen anytime soon including: Gaming hasn’t bought into it with only two percent of gamers having head mounted displays; Wall Street isn’t interested internally and CEOs aren’t using it.

“Today’s Get X and millennial business leaders will take up any serious valuable technology that will give them an edge in their work – from Zoom to private jets,” he says. “Many years after their launch, how many CEOs use a Vive or Oculus? (I wonder how many would even known those brand names.)

He argues too, that Mark Zuckerberg himself is unlikely to commonly use the technology and that people hate wearing facemasks to protect themselves from a killer virus, ‘what chance they will regularly wear a heavy lump of hard electronics across the eye to make online business meetings slightly less dull?’

To be fair, even Facebook acknowledges it will likely take 10 to 15 years to develop responsible products for the ‘embodied internet’.

Meanwhile, Gartner has also released Maverick Research – that’s research designed to spark ‘new, unconventional insights’ – saying deep fakes will kill the metaverse; synthetic media could save it.

It argues that the damage done by deep fakes will only worsen as the internet evolves into an immersive metaverse and that a trusted ecosystem based on blockchain authentication and AI-based detection needs to be established if synthetic media is to displace deep fakes.

“Digital humans, synthetic avatars, agents and environments are already commonplace and will be ubiquitous in the metaverse,” the report says.

“This requires a trusted and verifiable environment if the digital economy is to thrive. At this point, such an environment does not exist.”

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