Nah, I doubt it. Only because they stole the logo from a redditor who made a big fuss about it. I doubt the redditor was thinking CCP when he made it but maybe I guess.
Why send it to the campaign if they didn't want them to use it????
This reminds me of the people who posted in video game recommendation forums, and when the devs adopt the idea, the people complain that they didn't get paid for it.
McDonald's marketing inserted their "im loving it" jingle into multiple top-50 pop and rap hits for years prior to releasing it as their slogan, just so it was pre-programmed as familiar to us...
It's entirely possible, especially given Reddits documented algorithm fuckery, that the redditor release and insuing "controversy" of that logo was a marketing ploy or some kind of market testing.
Why is it not likely? Just because it feels implausible to you?
You're telling me that a presidential campaign that focus group tests everything and relies heavily on datasets built during the hillary/Obama election cycles just randomly stole their logo from a random redditor?
What makes the official narrative most likely? Do you believe everything CNN and Fox tell you as well?
Spez: I came in hot. My argument boils down to this.
-it is unlikely the official narrative is true (both in this case and as a general principle).
-it is likely an alternative is the truth. However given the number of possible alternatives and lack of complete knowledge on our part, we are unlikely to know what that actual truth is, and can only theorize.
Yeah you did lol. It's all good. yeah, I don't think its likely at all. I don't see any benefit in the redditor posting on r/legaladvice and bringing that kind of attention to the logo. A lot of ways to bring attention to it and I doubt they're first choice would be the question of copyright infringement. Just me idk. It's cool if you do though, I just don't see it.
Nah, I doubt it. Only because they stole the logo from a redditor who made a big fuss about it. I doubt the redditor was thinking CCP when he made it but maybe I guess.
https://www.independentsentinel.com/creepy-joe-biden-is-accused-of-stealing-someones-logo/
Why send it to the campaign if they didn't want them to use it????
This reminds me of the people who posted in video game recommendation forums, and when the devs adopt the idea, the people complain that they didn't get paid for it.
If nobody asked to pay you, don't expect pay.
These people are not living in the real world.
Don't know don't care. All I'm saying is that this little whiny bitch made the logo first and I doubt he had CCP on his mind when he did it.
Chill out. I absolutely agree with you here, I scrolled down the comment section specifically to look for a post like yours.
Lol, "Chill out". Was it "Don't know don't care" where I crossed the line with you? Me so sorry.
McDonald's marketing inserted their "im loving it" jingle into multiple top-50 pop and rap hits for years prior to releasing it as their slogan, just so it was pre-programmed as familiar to us...
It's entirely possible, especially given Reddits documented algorithm fuckery, that the redditor release and insuing "controversy" of that logo was a marketing ploy or some kind of market testing.
Possible. Not likely. But possible yes.
Why is it not likely? Just because it feels implausible to you?
You're telling me that a presidential campaign that focus group tests everything and relies heavily on datasets built during the hillary/Obama election cycles just randomly stole their logo from a random redditor?
What makes the official narrative most likely? Do you believe everything CNN and Fox tell you as well?
Spez: I came in hot. My argument boils down to this. -it is unlikely the official narrative is true (both in this case and as a general principle). -it is likely an alternative is the truth. However given the number of possible alternatives and lack of complete knowledge on our part, we are unlikely to know what that actual truth is, and can only theorize.
Yeah you did lol. It's all good. yeah, I don't think its likely at all. I don't see any benefit in the redditor posting on r/legaladvice and bringing that kind of attention to the logo. A lot of ways to bring attention to it and I doubt they're first choice would be the question of copyright infringement. Just me idk. It's cool if you do though, I just don't see it.