Mitch Wagner attended an Intel press and analyst event today where he spotted these notices "posted discreetly in a couple of places on the walls": at first glance, they seem like your garden-variety abusive bullshit release ("Abandon hope all ye who enter here") but there's a decidedly Vessel-esque clause that seems to be saying that Intel claims the copyright in any photo or video in which any of the event appears, even "distorted in character or form, throughout the world, in all media now known or hereafter invented." This is some next-level bullshit.
Tuesday, 2 April 2019
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
There are apparently a bunch of different, totally unconnected people who have made their own Lovecraftian versions of "Jolene....
-
Kernit is a font inspired by the work of Jim Henson. [h/t Akimbo_NOT ]. It's Nice That: Full of curves, with the counters and eyes ...
-
Holy shit. I don't watch a lot of videos; I prefer transcripts. When I absolutely have to get through a video, I usually put it in a b...
-
Scotty H created this spectrographic animation of a classic dial-up modem's startup noise. Here's a breakdown, by Oona Räisänen ...
-
For two years, China's Yutu-2 rover has been rolling around the dark side of the Moon, collecting images and data that it's been se...
-
Chameleons have evolved a superfast and long tongue to grab insects in an instant. Inspired by this marvelous bit of nature, engineers at...
-
Pentecostal Bishops Forum on Wednesday told President Muhammadu Buhari that there was hunger in the land. The clerics made their feelings k...
-
https://vimeo.com/71952791 What happens if you allow a group of onlookers to do anything they want to you for six hours? Marina Abramovich ...
-
A spool of cable fell off a truck on Route 40 in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, turning the highway into a hyperrealistic video game.
Powered by Blogger.