
We weren't able to find out who the buyer is; he goes by nedstede2769 on eBay, where his 3-year-old account has no feedback. Alderman said he didn't want to give the buyer's name without checking first.
Alderman's company, Eros LLC, specializes in adult business on the Internet, with 90% of its business in Second Life. He said Eros sold Amsterdam so it could concentrate on building a new, much larger sex business in the game. While Amsterdam is open to anyone logged on to the game, the new business will be available only to adults.
"I felt Amsterdam should be open to the public as it's an SL icon," said Alderman.
Amsterdam is one of the most popular sites in Second Life. It's a
detailed reproduction of several streets in the real-world city,
including a canal, parked Cooper Mini cars, a streetcar, and bicycles.
Other features: a large, European-style public square, canal with canal
boats, train station and train, and hundreds of shops. The overwhelming
majority of the shops in Second Life's Amsterdam sell sexual
merchandise. And avatars posing as streetwalkers hang around near the
train station, openly soliciting cybersex-for-pay with any avatar who
stands still for a few minutes and many walking through.
Most newcomers to Second Life visit Amsterdam early on, because of both
the titillation factor and its attractive, detailed design.
The site is also a popular venue for in-game events such as live music
concerts, said Daniel Huebner, director of community affairs for Second
Life developers Linden Lab.
"It's a nice, high-end locale in Second Life," he said. "It's not
filled with a lot of random content, it's cohesive and immersive. It
was created as a single vision, something that the other content in
Second Life occasionally lacks."
Alderman and associates built Amsterdam using high-resolution photos of
the actual city. "It was the first of its kind in SL to be constructed
that way. Many developers use the process now," he said.