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Game Artists Not Happy That Developer Is Selling Their Nearly Decade-Old Work As NFTs
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Image: Jason Rohrer
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The question at the heart of this week’s incessant NFT debate is one of ownership: How, in the digital age, can one really own anything? And when somebody purchases a glorified gif or jpg for mind-boggling amounts of money, what do they even own? Not rights. Not the sole copy of the image. So what? Now indie developer Jason Rohrer has added a new wrinkle by creating an NFT auction using artwork he commissioned from other people in 2012 long before NFTs were ever created.
[Images: Francesco Milanese/iStock]
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After all the challenges of 2020, there’s one thing we can all look forward to in the new year: Adobe Flash Player will finally be dead.
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The once-mighty browser plug-in, which used to be essential for watching web videos, playing casual online games, and visiting bad restaurant websites, received its last update on December 8. Major web browsers such as Google’s Chrome and Apple’s Safari will disable Flash at the end of the year, and Adobe is already encouraging users to uninstall the plug-in from their computers. On January 12, even people who still have Flash installed will be locked out as Adobe blocks Flash content from running within the Flash Player software.